Triangular cupola


In geometry, the triangular cupola is one of the Johnson solids. It can be seen as half a cuboctahedron.

Formulae

The following formulae for the volume and surface area can be used if all faces are regular, with edge length a:

Dual polyhedron

The dual of the triangular cupola has 6 triangular and 3 kite faces:
Dual triangular cupolaNet of dual

Related polyhedra and honeycombs

The triangular cupola can be augmented by 3 square pyramids, leaving adjacent coplanar faces. This isn't a Johnson solid because of its coplanar faces. Merging those coplanar triangles into larger ones, topologically this is another triangular cupola with isosceles trapezoidal side faces. If all the triangles are retained and the base hexagon is replaced by 6 triangles, it generates a coplanar deltahedron with 22 faces.
The triangular cupola can form a tessellation of space with square pyramids and/or octahedra, the same way octahedra and cuboctahedra can fill space.
The family of cupolae with regular polygons exists up to n=5, and higher if isosceles triangles are used in the cupolae.