The tetrahedron, the cube, the octahedron, the dodecahedron and the icosahedron.
Tetrahedron, Hexahedron(cube), Octahedron, Dodecahedron, and Icosahedron
Octahedron
Tetrahedron
Icosahedron
dodecahedron
cube
hexahedron
Quite simply, it doesn't fulfill the requirements for a "platonic solid", which include the requirement that all bounding areas must be regular polygons. A square is a regular polygon; a rectangle is not.
the heat expand the solids atoms
All solids.
Solids turning into gases is called Sublimation.
Solids.
Euclid was the one who proved that there are only five platonic solids.
IcosahedronDodecahedronTetrahedronCubeOctahedronHope these are useful
We don't know for certain who discovered the platonic solids first. However, Pythagoras is credited by some sources as discovering the platonic solids first. Other sources credit Theaetetus as being the first to describe all five platonic solids and proving that these are the *only* platonic solids.
Because 6 platonic solids would be too many, and 4 wouldn't be enough
Because 6 platonic solids would be too many, and 4 wouldn't be enough
The Name Platonic solid Comes from Plato the second main reseacher of the five solids. Pythagoras was the one discovered the platonic solids
The five platonic solids.
A trapezoid is not a platonic solid. There are only five platonic solids. They are the tetrahedron, hexahedron, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron.
The five platonic solids are the Tetrahedron, Hexahedronor Cube, Octahedron, Dodecahedron, and the Icosahedron
No, a cone is not a Platonic solid. The Platonic solids are the five regular polyhedra: tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron.
There (not their) are 5 platonic solids.
You probably mean the Platonic Solids, they are the only five shapes constructed from the same faces.