Well, honey, if you slap those two sections together, you'd end up with one big ol' shape, now wouldn't you? It's like putting two puzzle pieces together to make a bigger picture. So, to answer your question, the larger shape would be a combination of the two sections fitting snugly side by side.
a larger triangle, a larger trapezoid, it depends where and how it's placed.
Two sections of a sphere attached together - bit like a UFO.
Places where a 9 sided shape needs to be fitted into.
A hemisphere is a 3-d shape and so does not have a name as a 2-d shape. 2-d sections of a hemisphere can be circles, semicircles, or sections of circles, depending on the inclination of the intersecting plane.
Well, honey, if you slap those two sections together, you'd end up with one big ol' shape, now wouldn't you? It's like putting two puzzle pieces together to make a bigger picture. So, to answer your question, the larger shape would be a combination of the two sections fitting snugly side by side.
A bigger square, a rectangle, an irregular concave hexagon, an irregular concave octagon are all possibilities.
flat bones
A Rhombic Star Puzzle has 6 indectical peices that when fitted together, make the shape of a ornimental star.
a larger triangle, a larger trapezoid, it depends where and how it's placed.
Two sections of a sphere attached together - bit like a UFO.
Places where a 9 sided shape needs to be fitted into.
When a sphere is cut into cross sections, the shape formed is a circle. This is because all cross sections of a sphere will be circular in shape, regardless of the angle or position of the cut.
A hemisphere is a 3-d shape and so does not have a name as a 2-d shape. 2-d sections of a hemisphere can be circles, semicircles, or sections of circles, depending on the inclination of the intersecting plane.
Mars' moons are much smaller than, for example, Earth's Moon, or the larger moons of Jupiter. A large moon will have a larger gravity, which will tend to pull the moon together into a spherical shape.
Cylinder
Spaceship Earth, Epcot's most recognizable symbol, is a geodesic sphere (actually constructed of two domes fitted together, one sitting on a platform and the other suspended below it).