They are both solid figures.
A circle in a solid is called a cross-section.
A Uniform Cross Section is the cross section of the solid, parallel to base, such that the resulting figure has the same shape and size as that of the base of the figure.More about Uniform Cross SectionSolids like pyramids and cones have slant heights and hence do not have uniform cross section.Examples of Uniform Cross SectionThe uniform cross section of the given prism is a square.The uniform cross section of the given cylinder is a circle.In short to say, uniform cross-section are when you dissect a 3D solid and you get all same shape (uniform).
Every section of a solid sphere is a filled-in circle, i.e. a disk with zero thickness.
It is a horizontal cross-section. Its shape will depend on the shape of the solid and its orientation.
triangle
They are both solid figures.
It is a cross section.
A circle in a solid is called a cross-section.
When a 3-dimensional (solid) object is cut by a plane, the 2-dimensional shape made where the solid object and the plane meet is the cross section.
A full section of a solid is when a plane cuts through the entire solid, revealing its complete cross-section. This is helpful for analyzing the internal structure and geometry of the solid.
A Uniform Cross Section is the cross section of the solid, parallel to base, such that the resulting figure has the same shape and size as that of the base of the figure.More about Uniform Cross SectionSolids like pyramids and cones have slant heights and hence do not have uniform cross section.Examples of Uniform Cross SectionThe uniform cross section of the given prism is a square.The uniform cross section of the given cylinder is a circle.In short to say, uniform cross-section are when you dissect a 3D solid and you get all same shape (uniform).
Every section of a solid sphere is a filled-in circle, i.e. a disk with zero thickness.
A solid with a triangular cross section when the cross section is taken parallel to the base could be either a triangular prism, a triangular pyramid, or a triangular frustrum.. I've been sitting here trying to convince myself (without actually bearing down and trying to prove it mathematically) that any cross section of a regular tetrahedron (a special case of triangular pyramid) taken perpendicularly to the base is a triangle, and I THINK this is the case, but as I said I certainly haven't rigorously proven it; I'm just unable to come up with any obvious situation where this is not true.
Volume = cross-section area*length
square pyramid
It is a horizontal cross-section. Its shape will depend on the shape of the solid and its orientation.