Of course, there was no little white polyhedron surfacing with all-purpose answers.
2
An edifice is no longer an edifice; it is a polyhedron.
3
Galton's polyhedron cannot be fully rounded by the emerging Darwinian consensus:
4
The fifth and final regular polyhedron is the dodecahedron, with 12 pentagonal faces.
5
For the particularly brave, there's an open-air seating area on top of each polyhedron.
1
The synthesis strategy involves one-step route for doping foreign metallic element and forming porous cobalt phosphide polyhedrons.
2
Gray, black, dazzling marble white, arranged in pyramids and many-sided polyhedrons, some as translucent as frosted glass.
3
The polyhedrons, for example.
4
Well, Mr. Cornell, you may know that in the field of solid geometry there are only five possible regular polyhedrons.
5
On the regular polyhedrons:
1
By joining identical polygons together, we can form solid bodies called regular polyhedra.
2
Lethal doses of cell- and host-derived polyhedra were not significantly different.
3
Morphological analysis of polyhedra derived from cell culture showed greater variability in size relative to host-derived polyhedra.
4
After a moment they started to lose facial definition as they became a series of complex irregular polyhedra.
5
Going beyond planar designs, the book contains numerous nets of polyhedra and templates for applying Escheresque designs to them.
6
The printer cranks out up to 150 polyhedra each year - everything from models of protein crystallography to Mars' topography.
7
Yields of polyhedra from Tn5B1-4 were sixfold higher than those from the cell line Sf21.
8
But what I like most about them is that they are an easy way to explore simple geometric solids, or polyhedra.
9
By comparing several candidate space-filling polyhedra, we find that the oblate shapes are preferred over prolate shapes for all volume-to-surface ratios.
10
Cohesion of the structure is accomplished through Pb-Br contacts of two of the three lead atoms, leading to highly asymmetric coordination polyhedra.
11
The maximum size of cell culture-derived polyhedra was over 1.5 times larger than that of insect-derived polyhedra.
12
The former were rod-shaped structures that resembled an ear of corn, the latter polyhedra that approximated the sphere, consisting of 20 triangular faces glued together.
13
By joining identical polygons together, we can form solid bodies called regular polyhedra.
14
Lethal doses of cell- and host-derived polyhedra were not significantly different.
15
Morphological analysis of polyhedra derived from cell culture showed greater variability in size relative to host-derived polyhedra.
16
After a moment they started to lose facial definition as they became a series of complex irregular polyhedra.