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7 (number)Elementary shapesPolygons by the number of sides

Heptagon

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A colorful diagram showing the different ways a seven-sided shape (heptagon) can be flipped and turned while still looking the same.

In geometry, a heptagon is a seven-sided polygon or 7-gon. It is a basic shape studied in math and appears in many real-world designs and patterns.

The heptagon is sometimes called a septagon, using septa- (a shortened form of septua-), which comes from Latin. This prefix is used instead of hepta-, which has Greek origins. Both prefixes mean the number seven, and they are related in language. The word ends with ‑gon, a suffix from the Greek word γωνἰα, romanized as gonía, meaning "angle."

Heptagons can be found in architecture, art, and nature. Their unique shape makes them interesting for both learning and creative projects.

Regular heptagon

Heptagon with given side length:An animation from a neusis construction with marked ruler, according to David Johnson Leisk (Crockett Johnson).

A regular heptagon is a seven-sided shape where all sides and angles are the same. Each internal angle measures 128 4⁄7 degrees or about 128.57°. This shape has special symmetry and unique features for its lines joining vertices and how it can be drawn.

The area of a regular heptagon can be found if the length of one side is known. When a heptagon is drawn inside a circle, it covers about 87.10% of the circle's space. While it cannot be made using only a compass and straightedge, other tools or ways let us create it. The heptagon also connects to special triangles named heptagonal triangles, which use its sides and lines joining vertices in their design.


A neusis construction of the interior angle in a regular heptagon.

An animation from a neusis construction with radius of circumcircle O A ¯ = 6 {\displaystyle {\overline {OA}}=6} , according to Andrew M. Gleason based on the angle trisection by means of the tomahawk. This construction relies on the fact that
cos ⁡ ( 2 π 7 ) = 1 6 ( 2 7 cos ⁡ ( 1 3 arctan ⁡ 3 3   ) − 1 ) . {\displaystyle \cos \left({\tfrac {2\pi }{7}}\right)={\tfrac {1}{6}}\left(2{\sqrt {7}}\cos \left({\tfrac {1}{3}}\arctan 3{\sqrt {3}}~\right)-1\right).}

Star heptagons

Two special star-shaped heptagons can be made from regular heptagons. These are called {7/2} and {7/3}, based on a math rule for connecting the points. You can see them as blue and green stars inside a red heptagon shape.

These star heptagons are interesting because they show how shapes can be rearranged in new and beautiful ways.

Tiling and packing

A regular triangle, heptagon, and 42-gon can fit together at a point without leaving a gap. But they cannot cover the whole plane by themselves because there are spaces left. In the hyperbolic plane, it is possible to make patterns with regular heptagons. There are also ways to make patterns using concave heptagons.

The regular heptagon can be arranged closely together in a pattern that covers about 89.269% of the plane. This is thought to be one of the least dense ways to arrange shapes like this.

Empirical examples

Some coins from Zambia are shaped like heptagons, which have seven sides. Many countries use coins shaped like heptagons to help them roll smoothly in machines. These include coins from the United Kingdom, Barbados, and Botswana, among others.

Buildings like the Mausoleum of Prince Ernst in Stadthagen, Germany, also have heptagonal shapes. Some old designs of the coat of arms of Georgia included a special seven-pointed star shape.

Images

An illustrative geometry problem for educational use.
The dome inside a beautiful historical mausoleum in Stadthagen.
A simple diagram showing a mathematical symbol used in geometry and group theory.
A Coxeter-Dynkin diagram, used in geometry and mathematics to represent symmetrical structures.
A Coxeter-Dynkin diagram, used in geometry to represent symmetries of regular polyhedra.
A mathematical diagram showing an approximation of a heptagon.
A mathematical diagram showing how regular polygons can meet at a single point.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Heptagon, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.