Heptagonal antiprism

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Heptagonal antiprism

In geometry, the heptagonal antiprism is the fifth in an infinite set of antiprisms formed by two parallel polygons separated by a strip of triangles. In the case of the heptagonal antiprism, the caps are two regular heptagons. As a result, this polyhedron has 14 vertices, and 14 equilateral triangle faces. There are 14 edges where a triangle meets a heptagon, and another 14 edges where two triangles meet.

More information Uniform heptagonal antiprism ...
Uniform heptagonal antiprism
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TypePrismatic uniform polyhedron
ElementsF = 16, E = 28
V = 14 (χ = 2)
Faces by sides14{3}+2{7}
Schläfli symbols{2,14}
sr{2,7}
Wythoff symbol| 2 2 7
Coxeter diagram
Symmetry groupD7d, [2+,14], (2*7), order 28
Rotation groupD7, [7,2]+, (722), order 14
ReferencesU77(e)
DualHeptagonal trapezohedron
Propertiesconvex
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Vertex figure
3.3.3.7
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The heptagonal antiprism was first depicted by Johannes Kepler, as an example of the general construction of antiprisms.[1]

References

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