English edit

 
A snub disphenoid
 
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Etymology edit

So named in 1966 by mathematician Norman Johnson in his classification of the Johnson solids. See also   Snub disphenoid on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Noun edit

snub disphenoid (plural snub disphenoids)

  1. A non-regular convex polyhedron that has 12 equilateral triangles as faces and 18 edges and is a Johnson solid.
    • 2005, Robin Hartshorne, Geometry: Euclid and Beyond, page 457:
      For the snub disphenoid, our existence proof used the intermediate value theorem in the real numbers to argue that as AB decreases and CD increases there is a point where they become equal.
    • 2006, Andrew J. Locock, “Chapter 6: Crystal chemistry of actinide phosphates and arsenates”, in Sergey Krivovichev, Peter Burns, Ivan Tananaev, editors, Structural Chemistry of Inorganic Actinide Compounds, page 225:
      In this structure-type, the eight-coordinate polyhedra (snub disphenoids) share edges to form a framework composed of cross-linked chains that extend along the [100] and [010] directions.
    • 2013, Thomas Hull, Project Origami: Activities for Exploring Mathematics, 2nd edition, page 153:
      Thus, at a basic level this activity is about exploring such polyhedra, starting with the regular cases of the tetrahedron, octahedron, and icosahedron and moving into other solids like the triangular dipyramid and snub disphenoid.

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