It is an octahedron in the form of a hexagonal prism.
It is an octahedron in the form of a hexagonal prism.
It is an octahedron in the form of a hexagonal prism.
It is an octahedron in the form of a hexagonal prism.
A hexagonal prism has 8 faces: 2 hexagonal bases and 6 rectangular lateral faces. The rectangular faces are perpendicular to the hexagonal bases. Therefore, there are 6 perpendicular faces in a hexagonal prism.
hexagonal prism
Hexagonal prism
a hexagonal prism
A hexagonal prism has 6 rectangular faces and 2 hexagonal faces. Since it has 8 faces in total, it is a type of irregular octahedron, however it is correctly classified as a prismatic uniform polyhedron to avoid ambiguity with the regular octahedron with triangular faces. The hexagonal prism forms the basis of the hexagonal prismatic honeycomb.
A polyhedron that has a face that is not a base is a triangular prism. In a triangular prism, the two triangular faces serve as the bases, while the three rectangular faces are considered lateral faces. These lateral faces are not bases, demonstrating that a polyhedron can have faces that are not classified as bases.
A hexagonal prism has bases that are hexagonal. It has eight faces in all (octahedron).A rectangular prism has bases that are rectangles . It has six faces in all (hexahedron).
Both rectangular prisms and hexagonal prisms are types of three-dimensional geometric figures. They share similarities in that they both have two parallel faces (bases) and rectangular faces that connect the bases. Additionally, both can be classified as polyhedra, as they are made up of flat surfaces. However, their bases differ in shape, with rectangular prisms having rectangular bases and hexagonal prisms having hexagonal bases.
A hexagonal prism
A cube!* * * * *Is the exclamation mark put there to indicate a wrong answer?The correct answer is a hexagonal prism. Two hexagonal bases AND six rectangular faces.
It's called, not altogether surprisingly, a hexagonal prism. If the bases were hexagons and the other faces were triangles, it would be a hexagonal antiprism.
Hexagonal prisms, if you don't count the bases as faces. Rectangular prisms, if you do.