In geometry, a face of a polyhedron is any of the polygons that make up its boundaries. For example, any of the squares that bound a cube is a face of the cube. The suffix -hedron is derived from the Greek word hedra which means face.
Sometimes, in the case of a pyramid, the term face is understood to exclude the base.
The (two-dimensional) polygons that bound higher-dimensional polytopes are also commonly called faces. Formally, however, a face is any of the lower dimensional boundaries of the polytope, more specifically called an n-face.
Contents |
In convex geometry, a face of a polytope P is the intersection of any supporting hyperplane of P and P. From this definition it follows that the set of faces of a polytope includes the polytope itself and the empty set. For example, a polyhedron R3 is entirely on one hyperplane of R4. If R4 were spacetime, the hyperplane at t=0 supports and contains the entire polyhedron. Thus, by the formal definition, the polyhedron is a face of itself.
All of the following are the n-faces of a 4-dimensional polytope:
If the polytope lies in m-dimensions, a face in the (m-1)-dimension is called a facet. For example, a cell of a polychoron is a facet, a "face" of a polyhedron is a facet, an edge of a polygon is a facet, etc. A face in the (n-2)-dimension is called a ridge.