A pentagonal pyramid
A pentagonal pyramid (5 sides and 1 base) has 6 faces, 6 vertices, and 10 edges (5 between the sides and 5 with the base).
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 pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges. 6 faces, 10 edges, 6 vertices
triangula prism
It is a pentagonal based pyramid that has 6 vertices, 6 faces and 10 edges
A pentagonal prism.
It is a pentagonal based pyramid that has 6 vertices, 6 faces and 10 edges
A heptagonal prism gas 21 edges.
A pentagonal pyramid
Heptagonal Prism
PENTAGONAL prism
Well, honey, that sounds like a hexagonal prism to me. It's got those six faces, six vertices, and ten edges, making it the life of the 3D shape party. So, go ahead and strut your stuff with that hexagonal prism knowledge!
A pentagonal prism has 7 faces, 15 edges and 10 vertices
If it's a pyramid, it has 10 edges.
No shape does. Euler's Formula (vertices + faces = edges + 2) holds true for all shapes. For the given figures, this means: 4 + 6 = 6 + 2 → 10 = 8 but 10 ≠ 8, so the combinations of 4 vertices, 6 edges and 6 faces given does not represent a shape.