Faces: 10 Vertices: 16 Edges: 24
A prism with an n-sided base will have 2n vertices, n + 2 faces, and 3n edges. 15 edges
Oh, dude, it's like a math riddle! So, if a polyhedron has 10 more edges than vertices, we can use Euler's formula: Faces + Vertices - Edges = 2. Since we know the relationship between edges and vertices, we can substitute that in and solve for faces. So, it would have 22 faces. Math can be fun... sometimes.
A pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges. 6 faces, 10 edges, 6 vertices
It has 16 vertices and 10 faces. It is an octagonal prism.
Faces: 10 Vertices: 16 Edges: 24
Oh, dude, it's like a math riddle! So, if a polyhedron has 10 more edges than vertices, we can use Euler's formula: Faces + Vertices - Edges = 2. Since we know the relationship between edges and vertices, we can substitute that in and solve for faces. So, it would have 22 faces. Math can be fun... sometimes.
A pentagonal pyramid has 6 faces, 6 vertices and 10 edges.
A pentagonal pyramid has 6 faces, 6 vertices and 10 edges.
A pentagonal prism has 7 faces, 10 vertices and 15 edges.
A pentagonal based pyramid has 6 faces, ten edges and 6 vertices.
7 faces. 10 vertices. 15 edges.
Faces: 10 Vertices: 16 Edges: 24
A pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges. 6 faces, 10 edges, 6 vertices
It has 7 faces, 10 vertices, and 15 edges
Faces: 7 Vertices: 10 Edges: 15
It has 7 faces, 15 edges and 10 vertices