A triangular prism has 5 faces and 6 vertices. At each vertex it has three plane angles - making 18 two-dimensional angles.
A triangular prism reflects light at specific angles. Many are used in equipment such as binoculars and telescopes to reduce their physical size.
A triangular prism has five faces.
A triangular prism has 9 edges!
A triangular prism has six vertices (corners).
18
18
8
It has 12 right angles. 4 on each rectangular side. 3*4 = 12
Zero!
A triangular block prism has four right angles on each of the three faces, so the total 'on all the faces' = 12.
A triangular prism has 5 faces and 6 vertices. At each vertex it has three plane angles - making 18 two-dimensional angles.
A triangular prism reflects light at specific angles. Many are used in equipment such as binoculars and telescopes to reduce their physical size.
A triangular prism reflects light at specific angles. Many are used in equipment such as binoculars and telescopes to reduce their physical size.
14 if the triangular cross section has a right triangle, 12 otherwise.
Depends on the cross-sectional polygon.
A triangular prism has three rectangular faces which, between them, will have 4*3 = 12 right angles. It also has two triangular faces and these can have another 2 right angles. So the answer is 12 or 14, depending on whether the triangles are right angled or not.