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Regular polygon

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: regular polygon
(′reg·yə·lər ′päl·i′gän)

(mathematics) A polygon with congruent sides and congruent interior angles.


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WordNet: regular polygon
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a polygon with all sides and all angles equal


Wikipedia: Regular polygon
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Set of convex regular p-gons

Triangle.Equilateral.svgKvadrato.svgPentagon.svgHexagon.svg
Heptagon.svgOctagon.svgEnneagon.svgDecagon.svg
Regular polygons

Edges and vertices p
Schläfli symbol {p}
Coxeter–Dynkin diagram CDW ring.pngCDW p.pngCDW dot.png
Symmetry group Dihedral (Dp)
Dual polygon Self-dual
Area
(with t=edge length)
A = \tfrac14pt^2 \cot \frac{\pi}{p}
Internal angle \left(1-\frac{2}{p}\right)\times 180^\circ
Internal angle sum \left(p-2\right)\times 180^\circ
Properties convex, cyclic, equilateral, isogonal, isotoxal

A regular polygon is a polygon which is equiangular (all angles are equal in measure) and equilateral (all sides have the same length). Regular polygons may be convex or star.

Contents

General properties

These properties apply to both convex and a star regular polygons.

A regular n-sided polygon has rotational symmetry of order n.

All vertices of a regular polygon lie on a common circle (the circumscribed circle), i.e., they are concyclic points.

Together with the property of equal-length sides, this implies that every regular polygon also has an inscribed circle or incircle.

A regular n-sided polygon can be constructed with compass and straightedge if and only if the odd prime factors of n are distinct Fermat primes. See constructible polygon.

Symmetry

The symmetry group of an n-sided regular polygon is dihedral group Dn (of order 2n): D2, D3, D4,... It consists of the rotations in Cn, together with reflection symmetry in n axes that pass through the center. If n is even then half of these axes pass through two opposite vertices, and the other half through the midpoint of opposite sides. If n is odd then all axes pass through a vertex and the midpoint of the opposite side.

Regular convex polygons

All regular simple polygons (a simple polygon is one which does not intersect itself anywhere) are convex. Those having the same number of sides are also similar.

An n-sided convex regular polygon is denoted by its Schläfli symbol {n}.

In certain contexts all the polygons considered will be regular. In such circumstances it is customary to drop the prefix regular. For instance all the faces of uniform polyhedra must be regular and the faces will be described simply as triangle, square, pentagon, etc.

Angles

For a regular convex n-gon, each interior angle has a measure of:

(1-\frac{2}{n})\times 180 (or equally of (n-2)\times \frac{180}{n} ) degrees,
or \frac{(n-2)\pi}{n} radians,
or \frac{(n-2)}{2n} full turns,

and each exterior angle (supplementary to the interior angle) has a measure of \frac{360}{n} degrees, with the sum of the exterior angles equal to 360 degrees or 2π radians or one full turn.

Diagonals

For n > 2 the number of diagonals is \frac{n (n-3)}{2}, i.e., 0, 2, 5, 9, ... They divide the polygon into 1, 4, 11, 24, ... pieces.


Radius

The radius from the centre of a regular polygon to one of the vertices is related to the side length, s or apothem, a:

r=\frac{s} {2 \sin{ \frac{\pi}{n} }} = \frac{a} {\cos{ \frac{\pi}{n} }}

Area

Relgular polygon with n = 5: pentagon with side s, apothem a, and circumradius r

The area A of a convex regular n-sided polygon having side s, apothem a, and circumradius r is given by [1]

A= \frac{1}{2}nsa = \frac{1}{4}ns^2\cot{\tfrac{\pi}{n}} = na^2\tan{\tfrac{\pi}{n}} = \frac{1}{2}nr^2\sin{\tfrac{2\pi}{n}}

For regular polygons with side s=1 this produces the following table:

Sides Name Exact area Approximate area
3 equilateral triangle \frac{\sqrt{3}}{4} 0.433
4 square 1 1.000
5 regular pentagon \frac {1}{4} \sqrt{25+10\sqrt{5}} 1.720
6 regular hexagon \frac{3 \sqrt{3}}{2} 2.598
7 regular heptagon   3.634
8 regular octagon 2 + 2 \sqrt{2} 4.828
9 regular nonagon   6.182
10 regular decagon \frac{5}{2} \sqrt{5+2\sqrt{5}} 7.694
11 regular hendecagon   9.366
12 regular dodecagon 6+3\sqrt{3} 11.196
13 regular triskaidecagon   13.186
14 regular tetradecagon   15.335
15 regular pentadecagon   17.642
16 regular hexadecagon   20.109
17 regular heptadecagon   22.735
18 regular octadecagon   25.521
19 regular enneadecagon   28.465
20 regular icosagon   31.569
100 regular hectagon   795.513
1000 regular chiliagon   79577.210
10000 regular myriagon   7957746.893
1,000,000 regular megagon   79,577,471,545.685

The amounts that the areas are less than those of circles with the same perimeter, are (rounded) equal to 0.26, for n<8 a little more (the amounts decrease with increasing n to the limit π/12).

Regular star polygons

A pentagram {5/2}

A non-convex regular polygon is a regular star polygon. The most common example is the pentagram, which has the same vertices as a pentagon, but connects alternating vertices.

For an n-sided star polygon, the Schläfli symbol is modified to indicate the 'starriness' m of the polygon, as {n/m}. If m is 2, for example, then every second point is joined. If m is 3, then every third point is joined. The boundary of the polygon winds around the centre m times, and m is sometimes called the density of the polygon.

Examples:

m and n must be co-prime, or the figure will degenerate. Depending on the precise derivation of the Schläfli symbol, opinions differ as to the nature of the degenerate figure. For example {6/2} may be treated in either of two ways:

  • For much of the 20th century (see for example Coxeter (1948)), we have commonly taken the /2 to indicate joining each vertex of a convex {6} to its near neighbours two steps away, to obtain the regular compound of two triangles, or hexagram.
  • Many modern geometers, such as Grünbaum (2003), regard this as incorrect. They take the /2 to indicate moving two places around the {6} at each step, obtaining a "double-wound" triangle that has two vertices superimposed at each corner point and two edges along each line segment. Not only does this fit in better with modern theories of abstract polytopes, but it also more closely copies the way in which Poinsot (1809) created his star polygons - by taking a single length of wire and bending it at successive points through the same angle until the figure closed.

Duality of regular polygons

All regular polygons are self-dual to congruency, and for odd n they are self-dual to identity.

In addition the regular star figures (compounds), being composed of regular polygons, are also self-dual.

Regular polygons as faces of polyhedra

A uniform polyhedron has regular polygons as faces, such that for every two vertices there is an isometry mapping one into the other (just as there is for a regular polygon).

A quasiregular polyhedron is a uniform polyhedron which has just two kinds of face alternating around each vertex.

A regular polyhedron is a uniform polyhedron which has just one kind of face.

The remaining (non-uniform) convex polyhedra with regular faces are known as the Johnson solids.

A polyhedron having regular triangles as faces is called a deltahedron.

See also


References

  • Coxeter, H. S. M. (1948), Regular Polytopes, Methuen and Co. 
  • Grünbaum, B.; Are your polyhedra the same as my polyhedra?, Discrete and comput. geom: the Goodman-Pollack festschrift, Ed. Aronov et al., Springer (2003), pp. 461–488.
  • Poinsot, L.; Memoire sur les polygones et polyèdres. J. de l'École Polytechnique 9 (1810), pp. 16–48.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Regular polygon" Read more