Descriptive Geometry II: Oct. 23/ 2021 Muhammed A
Descriptive Geometry II: Oct. 23/ 2021 Muhammed A
Descriptive Geometry II: Oct. 23/ 2021 Muhammed A
Geometry II
Lecture 2
Oct. 23/ 2021
Muhammed A.
Lecture 2
Solid Projections
• Basic solid forms
• …intersections…
Polyhedrons
A polyhedron is solid that is bounded by
polygons, called faces that enclose a single
region of space.
An edge of polyhedron is a line segment
formed by the intersection of two faces.
A vertex of a polyhedron is a point where
three or more edges meet.
The plural of polyhedron is polyhedra, or
polyhedrons
Polyhedrons
A polyhedron is regular if all of
its faces are congruent regular
polygons.
A polyhedron is convex if any
two points on its surfaces can be
connected by a segment that lies
entirely inside or on the
polyhedron.
Polyhedrons
The polyhedron is
nonconvex, or concave
if this segment goes
outside the polyhedron.
Polyhedrons
• There are five regular polyhedra, called Platonic solids, after
the Greek mathematician and philosopher Plato.
• The Platonic solids are:
• regular tetrahedron (4 faces)
• hexahedron or cube (6 faces)
• regular octahedron (8 faces)
• regular dodecahedron (12 faces) and
• regular icosahedron (20 faces).
• Platonic solids end in “hedron”. Hedron is Greek for “side” or
“face”.
Polyhedrons
Regular
Tetrahedron
4 faces
4 vertices
6 edges
Polyhedrons
Regular
Hexahedron or
Cube
6 faces
8 vertices
12 edges
Polyhedrons
Regular
Octahedron
8 faces
6 vertices
12 edges
Polyhedrons
Regular
Dodecahedron
12 faces
20 vertices
30 edges
Polyhedrons
Regular
Icosahedron
20 faces
12 vertices
30 edges
Polyhedrons
• The sum of the number of faces and
vertices is two more then the number
of edges in the solids above. This
result was proved by the Swiss
mathematician Leonhard Euler (1707
- 1783).
Polyhedrons
• Euler’s Theorem: The number of faces
(F), vertices (V), and edges (E) of a
polyhedron are
• related by the formula:
F+V=E+2
Prism
• Prism:
a solid bounded on the sides by parallelograms
and on the ends by polygonal figures in parallel planes.
• Right prism is a prism in which the joining edges and
faces are perpendicular to the base faces. This applies
if the joining faces are rectangular.
• If
the joining edges and faces are not perpendicular to
the base faces, it is called an oblique prism.
Prism
Regular right prism -
a right prism with a
base that is a regular
polygon
Pyramid
• Pyramid is a solid bounded on the sides by
triangles and on the ends by polygonal
figure.
• Rightpyramid is a pyramid that has its apex
aligned directly above the center of the
base.
Pyramid
Regular right
pyramid - a right
pyramid with a base
that is a regular
polygon
Pyramid
• Truncated pyramid (a): Section of solid (top and base
not parallel)
• Frustumof pyramid (b): Top and base are parallel to
each other
Surfaces of Revolution
•A surface of revolution is a surface created by
rotating a curve (the generatrix or the generator)
around a straight line (the axis) Examples of surfaces
generated by a straight line are cylindrical and
conical surfaces when the line is coplanar with the
axis, as well as hyperboloids of one sheet when the
line is skew to the axis
Surfaces of Revolution
Spherical Torus
Surfaces of Revolution
• Truncated solids: Section
of solids (top and base
not parallel)