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[personal profile] cjwatson
Dear Lazyweb:

[livejournal.com profile] ghoti and I were trying to explain a strange shape to [livejournal.com profile] xanna and Jacob in the hope that they knew the proper geometric name for it. This is the shape of the containers that the ice lollies we like come in (old but still accurate picture, search for "Jubbly"). It's the original tetrahedron shape used by Tetra Pak, now called the Tetra Classic (indeed the pack is so labelled). It's not a regular tetrahedron, though: it's constructed from four isosceles triangles. It's most easily constructed using this net (apologies for the dodgy quality of my Inkscape use):



Fold it such that edges A meet; in doing so edges B will also meet, along with edges C.

MathWorld reckons that it's a special case of an isosceles tetrahedron, but that only requires opposite pairs of the tetrahedral edges with the same length as A to have the same length, whereas in fact four edges have the same length in this shape.

Does anyone know if there's a proper name for this polyhedron? Doubly-isosceles tetrahedron or something?

(no subject)

Date: 2008-05-29 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alison-lees.livejournal.com
I would go for 'regular isosceles tetrahedron', or 'stretched tetrahedron' or better still, just call it by the name of the package. However, if one triangle is iscoceles, does the other have to be also? If 'opposite pairs' are the same, is that pair x the same and pair y the same but different, or do they have to be the same as well?

Warning: I'm not a mathematician, and I think maths is boring...

(no subject)

Date: 2008-05-29 11:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cartesiandaemon.livejournal.com
I second that suggestion. I don't know if there's a specific name, although I doubt it, but "stretched tetrahedron" is both precise, evocative, and most accurately conveys all of the likely properties. (I was going to say 'elongated', but apparently that means something else. In theory you should specify along what axis it is stretched, but I think it's fairly clear: the only other good choice is to stretch it perpendicular to one of the faces, and that's plainly called a "tall" tetrahedron :))

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