two rectangular prisms but they are smaller
The answer depends on how large the prism is.
The answer depends mainly on the plane which is used to divide the prism.The result can be a rectangular prism (or a cube), a trapezoidal prism, a triangular prism, but to get really exotic shapes the cutting plane needs to be not parallel to any of the faces or diagonals of the prism.
2 cm
2 cm
Did you mean vertices? A rectangular prism would have 8 vertices.
The dimensions are the length width and height of the prism. So if the prism is halfed then you would have to cut the dimensions in half depending on where the prism was cut.
A rectangular prism or a cuboid.
Rectangular prism
A cube cut in half is commonly referred to as a rectangular prism, specifically a cuboid. When a cube is divided, it typically results in two equal rectangular prisms, each with dimensions that reflect half the volume of the original cube. The exact terminology may vary based on the orientation of the cut.
We can get a two cubes because when you cut the rectangular prism you can get it.You will see.^_^
It would be a rectangular prism.
The answer depends on how large the prism is.
Yes, it is possible to cut a trapezium cross-section from a rectangular prism. This can be achieved by slicing the prism at an angle that intersects two opposite edges of the rectangular face, creating a trapezoidal shape. The specific dimensions and angles of the cut will determine the exact shape of the trapezium, but the geometry allows for such a cross-section.
No, a rectangular prism's cross-section will always have between 1 and 4 (inclusive) straight lines only.
Rectangular prism = 6Triangular prism = 5 Triangular pyramid = 4 Rectangular prism: it is still 6 Rectangular pyramid = 5.
The answer depends mainly on the plane which is used to divide the prism.The result can be a rectangular prism (or a cube), a trapezoidal prism, a triangular prism, but to get really exotic shapes the cutting plane needs to be not parallel to any of the faces or diagonals of the prism.
a triangular prism is different from a rectangular prism because: their names are different a triangular prism has a triangle for its' base a rectangular prism has a rectangle base a triangular prism has less sides than a rectangular prism a rectangular prism has more sides than a triangular prism