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Regular polytopesTypes of polygons

Regular polygon

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A visual comparison of regular polygons from triangles to polygons with 60 sides, showing how shapes become more circle-like with more sides.

In Euclidean geometry, a regular polygon is a special kind of polygon. In a regular polygon, every angle is the same size and every side is the same length. This makes regular polygons very neat and symmetrical. They can be either convex, meaning all their sides curve outwards, or star, which looks like a star shape.

Regular polygons are important in many areas, such as art, architecture, and nature. For example, honeybees build their hives in shapes made of regular hexagons because this uses space efficiently. As you add more sides to a regular polygon, it starts to look more and more like a circle. This happens whether you keep the total distance around the shape (its perimeter) the same, or you keep the length of each side the same. If the side lengths stay the same and you keep adding sides, the shape stretches out to look like a straight line.

General properties

All regular polygons, whether they are convex or star-shaped, share some special properties. A regular polygon with n sides has rotational symmetry of order n, meaning it looks the same after being rotated by certain angles.

The vertices of a regular polygon all lie on a single circle called the circumscribed circle. Because all sides are equal and all vertices lie on this circle, each regular polygon also has an inscribed circle that touches the midpoint of every side.

Symmetry

The symmetry of an n-sided regular polygon is described by a group called the dihedral group Dn. This group includes rotations and reflections. When you rotate the polygon by certain angles, it looks the same. Additionally, the polygon can be reflected across lines that pass through its center. If the number of sides n is even, some of these lines pass through opposite vertices, and others pass through the midpoints of opposite sides. If n is odd, each line passes through one vertex and the midpoint of the opposite side.

Regular convex polygons

All regular simple polygons are convex, which means their sides do not cross each other. Regular polygons with the same number of sides look the same in shape, but they can be different sizes.

For a regular polygon with n sides, each interior angle measures (\frac{(n-2) \times 180^\circ}{n}). As the number of sides gets bigger, the shape looks more like a circle. For example, a regular polygon with 10,000 sides has an interior angle of about 179.96°, which is almost a full 180°.

Examples of dissections for selected even-sided regular polygons
Sides6810121416
Rhombs3610152128
Sides182024304050
Rhombs364566105190300
Number
of sides
Area when side s = 1Area when circumradius R = 1Area when apothem a = 1
ExactApproxi­mationExactApproxi­mationRelative to circum­circle areaExactApproxi­mationRelative to in­circle area
nn 4 cot ⁡ ( π n ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {n}{4}}\cot \left({\tfrac {\pi }{n}}\right)} n 2 sin ⁡ ( 2 π n ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {n}{2}}\sin \left({\tfrac {2\pi }{n}}\right)} n 2 π sin ⁡ ( 2 π n ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {n}{2\pi }}\sin \left({\tfrac {2\pi }{n}}\right)} n tan ⁡ ( π n ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle n\tan \left({\tfrac {\pi }{n}}\right)} n π tan ⁡ ( π n ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {n}{\pi }}\tan \left({\tfrac {\pi }{n}}\right)}
3⁠ 3 4 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {\sqrt {3}}{4}}} 0.433012702⁠ 3 3 4 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {3{\sqrt {3}}}{4}}} 1.2990381050.4134966714⁠ 3 3 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 3{\sqrt {3}}} 5.1961524241.653986686
411.00000000022.0000000000.636619772244.0000000001.273239544
5⁠ 1 4 25 + 10 5 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {1}{4}}{\sqrt {25+10{\sqrt {5}}}}} 1.720477401⁠ 5 4 1 2 ( 5 + 5 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {5}{4}}{\sqrt {{\tfrac {1}{2}}\left(5+{\sqrt {5}}\right)}}} 2.3776412910.7568267288⁠ 5 5 − 2 5 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 5{\sqrt {5-2{\sqrt {5}}}}} 3.6327126401.156328347
6⁠ 3 3 2 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {3{\sqrt {3}}}{2}}} 2.598076211⁠ 3 3 2 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {3{\sqrt {3}}}{2}}} 2.5980762110.8269933428⁠ 2 3 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 2{\sqrt {3}}} 3.4641016161.102657791
73.6339124442.7364101890.87102641573.3710223331.073029735
8⁠ 2 + 2 2 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 2+2{\sqrt {2}}} 4.828427125⁠ 2 2 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 2{\sqrt {2}}} 2.8284271250.9003163160⁠ 8 ( 2 − 1 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 8\left({\sqrt {2}}-1\right)} 3.3137085001.054786175
96.1818241942.8925442440.92072542903.2757321091.042697914
10⁠ 5 2 5 + 2 5 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {5}{2}}{\sqrt {5+2{\sqrt {5}}}}} 7.694208843⁠ 5 2 1 2 ( 5 − 5 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {5}{2}}{\sqrt {{\tfrac {1}{2}}\left(5-{\sqrt {5}}\right)}}} 2.9389262620.9354892840⁠ 2 25 − 10 5 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 2{\sqrt {25-10{\sqrt {5}}}}} 3.2491969631.034251515
119.3656399072.9735244960.94650224403.2298914231.028106371
12⁠ 6 + 3 3 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 6+3{\sqrt {3}}} 11.1961524233.0000000000.9549296586⁠ 12 ( 2 − 3 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 12\left(2-{\sqrt {3}}\right)} 3.2153903091.023490523
1313.185768333.0207006170.96151886943.2042122201.019932427
1415.334501943.0371861750.96676638593.1954086421.017130161
15⁠ 15 8 ( 15 + 3 + 2 ( 5 + 5 ) ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {15}{8}}\left({\sqrt {15}}+{\sqrt {3}}+{\sqrt {2\left(5+{\sqrt {5}}\right)}}\right)} 17.64236291⁠ 15 16 ( 15 + 3 − 10 − 2 5 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {15}{16}}\left({\sqrt {15}}+{\sqrt {3}}-{\sqrt {10-2{\sqrt {5}}}}\right)} 3.0505248220.9710122088⁠ 15 2 ( 3 3 − 15 − 2 ( 25 − 11 5 ) ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {15}{2}}\left(3{\sqrt {3}}-{\sqrt {15}}-{\sqrt {2\left(25-11{\sqrt {5}}\right)}}\right)} 3.1883484261.014882824
16⁠ 4 ( 1 + 2 + 2 ( 2 + 2 ) ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 4\left(1+{\sqrt {2}}+{\sqrt {2\left(2+{\sqrt {2}}\right)}}\right)} 20.10935797⁠ 4 2 − 2 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 4{\sqrt {2-{\sqrt {2}}}}} 3.0614674600.9744953584⁠ 16 ( 1 + 2 ) ( 2 ( 2 − 2 ) − 1 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 16\left(1+{\sqrt {2}}\right)\left({\sqrt {2\left(2-{\sqrt {2}}\right)}}-1\right)} 3.1825978781.013052368
1722.735491903.0705541630.97738774563.1778507521.011541311
1825.520768193.0781812900.97981553613.1738856531.010279181
1928.465189433.0846449580.98187298543.1705392381.009213984
20⁠ 5 ( 1 + 5 + 5 + 2 5 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 5\left(1+{\sqrt {5}}+{\sqrt {5+2{\sqrt {5}}}}\right)} 31.56875757⁠ 5 2 ( 5 − 1 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {\tfrac {5}{2}}\left({\sqrt {5}}-1\right)} 3.0901699440.9836316430⁠ 20 ( 1 + 5 − 5 + 2 5 ) {\displaystyle \scriptstyle 20\left(1+{\sqrt {5}}-{\sqrt {5+2{\sqrt {5}}}}\right)} 3.1676888061.008306663
100795.51289883.1395259770.99934215653.1426266051.000329117
100079577.209753.1415719830.99999342003.1416029891.000003290
1047957746.8933.1415924480.99999993453.1415927571.000000033
106795774715453.1415926541.0000000003.1415926541.000000000

Constructible polygon

Main article: Constructible polygon

Some regular polygons can be drawn using just a compass and straightedge, while others cannot. Ancient Greek mathematicians could make polygons with 3, 4, or 5 sides. They also learned how to double the number of sides from any regular polygon they already had.

In 1796, Carl Friedrich Gauss showed that a regular 17-gon could be constructed. He created a rule to determine which regular polygons can be made. Later, Pierre Wantzel proved that this rule also explained which polygons could not be constructed.

Regular skew polygons

A regular skew polygon in 3-space is a special shape that moves in a zigzag way between two parallel flat surfaces. It is formed by the edges of a shape called a uniform antiprism. All its sides and angles are the same.

Regular skew polygons can also exist in more than three dimensions. Examples include the Petrie polygons, which are paths along edges that split a regular polytope into two parts. When these polygons become very large, they turn into shapes called skew apeirogons.


The cube contains a skew regular hexagon, seen as 6 red edges zig-zagging between two planes perpendicular to the cube's diagonal axis.

The zig-zagging side edges of a n-antiprism represent a regular skew 2n-gon, as shown in this 17-gonal antiprism.

Regular star polygons

A regular star polygon is a special type of non-convex regular polygon. The most well-known example is the pentagram, which looks like a five-pointed star. It has the same points as a pentagon, but it connects every second point.

For an n-sided star polygon, we use a special notation called the Schläfli symbol, written as {n/m}. The number m shows how many steps we take to connect the points. If m is 2, we connect every second point; if m is 3, we connect every third point, and so on. The lines of the star polygon wrap around the center m times.

Some common regular star polygons with up to 12 sides include:

For these shapes to be true stars, n and m must have no common factors other than 1. This means they are coprime.

Two interpretations of {6/2}
Grünbaum
{6/2} or 2{3}
Coxeter
2{3} or {6}[2{3}]{6}
Doubly-wound hexagonHexagram as a compound
of two triangles

Duality of regular polygons

All regular polygons are self-dual. This means they look the same even when you flip them. For polygons with an odd number of sides, they look exactly the same when flipped. Regular star figures, which are made up of regular polygons, are also self-dual.

See also: Self-dual polyhedra

See also: Dual polygon

Regular polygons as faces of polyhedra

A uniform polyhedron is a special 3D shape that uses regular polygons as its faces. This means all the shapes on its surface are the same size and shape. You can move one part of the shape to match any other part by turning or flipping it.

There are also other interesting 3D shapes that use regular polygons. Some of these, called quasiregular polyhedra, have two different kinds of regular polygon faces. When a 3D shape has only one kind of regular polygon face, it is known as a regular polyhedron. Other shapes with regular polygon faces that are not uniform are called Johnson solids. If a polyhedron has only regular triangles as faces, it is known as a deltahedron.

Images

The Western side of the Parthenon, an ancient Greek temple located in Athens.
A simple diagram used in math to show relationships between geometric shapes.
A simple diagram used in math to show relationships between geometric shapes.
A simple diagram showing a Coxeter-Dynkin element, used in math to describe symmetry.
Diagram showing the key measurements and angles of a regular pentagon.
A mathematical diagram showing connections between points, used to study geometric shapes and structures.
A Coxeter-Dynkin diagram element, used in geometry and mathematics to represent symmetry groups.
A simple mathematical symbol used in geometry to show relationships between shapes.

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

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