pentakaidecahedron

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Ancient Greek πέντε (pénte, five) + καί (kaí, and) + δέκᾰ (déka, ten) + -hedron.

Noun[edit]

pentakaidecahedron (plural pentakaidecahedra or pentakaidecahedrons)

  1. Synonym of pentadecahedron
    • 1935, R[oger] P[hilip] Wodehouse, “Angiospermae”, in Pollen Grains: Their structure, identification and significance in science and medicine, New York, N.Y., London: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., part II (Classification), section “Dicotyledons”, subsection “Compositae”, subsubsection “Cichorieae”, page 481:
      The lacunar pattern of this grain therefore includes six tetragonal and nine hexagonal faces. Relating this to polyhedrons, we find that no pentakaidecahedron with such a combination of faces can exist (see page 199).
    • 1963, Lee Leiserson, William H. McCoy, “Branch of Inorganic Chemistry”, in Saline Water Conversion Report for 1963, Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior, page 4, column 1:
      The host structure is similar to that of the (n–C4H9)4 N+C6H5COOH-·39.5 H2O consisting of a tetragonal body-centered arrangement of groups of five face-sharing pentagonal dodecahedra interlinked by tetrakaidecahedra and pentakaidecahedra.
    • 2003, Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, page 130, column 2:
      An ideal unit cell consists of ten dodecahedrons, sixteen tetrakaidecahedrons and four pentakaidecahedrons.

Related terms[edit]