Square pyramid
| Image | ![]() |
| Type | Pyramid, Johnson J – J – J |
| Faces | 4 triangles 1 square |
| Edges | 8 |
| Vertices | 5 |
| Vertex Config | |
| Symmetry | |
| Volume | |
| Angle | Equilateral square pyramid: |
| Dual | self-dual |
| Properties | convex, elementary (equilateral square pyramid) |
| Net |
In geometry, a square pyramid is a pyramid with a square base and four triangles, having a total of five faces. If the apex of the pyramid is directly above the center of the square, it becomes a form of right pyramid with four isosceles triangles. When all of the pyramid's edges are equal in length, its triangles are all equilateral, an example of a Johnson solid.
Square pyramids have appeared throughout the history of architecture, with examples being Egyptian pyramids and many other similar buildings. They also occur in chemistry in square pyramidal molecular structures. Square pyramids are often used in the construction of other polyhedra and as the cell of a four-dimensional polytope called cubic pyramid. Square pyramidal number is a natural number that counts the number of spheres stacked into a square pyramid. Many mathematicians in ancient times discovered the formula for the volume of a square pyramid with different approaches.
Special cases
As a right pyramid
A square pyramid has five vertices, eight edges, and five faces. One face, called the base of the pyramid, is a square; the four other faces are triangles. Four of the edges make up the square by connecting its four vertices. The other four edges are known as the lateral edges of the pyramid; they meet at the fifth vertex, called the apex. If the pyramid's apex lies on a line erected perpendicularly from the center of the square, the square pyramid becomes a right pyramid, and the four triangular faces are isosceles triangles. Otherwise, the pyramid has two or more non-isosceles triangular faces.
The slant height of a right square pyramid is defined as the height of one of its isosceles triangles. It can be obtained via the Pythagorean theorem:
where is the length of the triangle's base, also one of the square's edges, and is the length of the triangle's legs, which are lateral edges of the pyramid. The height of a right square pyramid can be similarly obtained, with a substitution of the slant height formula giving:
A polyhedron's surface area is the sum of the areas of its faces. The surface area of a right square pyramid can be expressed as , where and are the areas of one of its triangles and its base, respectively. The area of a triangle is half of the product of its base and side, with the area of a square being the length of the side squared. This gives the expression:
In general, the volume of a pyramid is equal to one-third of the area of its base multiplied by its height. Expressed in a formula for a square pyramid, this is:
Many mathematicians discovered the formula for calculating the volume of a square pyramid in ancient times. In the Moscow Mathematical Papyrus, Egyptian mathematicians demonstrated knowledge of the formula for calculating the volume of a truncated square pyramid, suggesting that they were also acquainted with the volume of a square pyramid, but it is unknown how the formula was derived. Beyond the discovery of the volume of a square pyramid, the problem of finding the slope and height of a square pyramid can be found in the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus. The Babylonian mathematicians also considered the volume of a frustum, but gave an incorrect formula for it. One Chinese mathematician Liu Hui also discovered the volume by the method of dissecting a rectangular solid into pieces.
Like other right pyramids with a regular polygon as a base, a right square pyramid has pyramidal symmetry, the symmetry of cyclic group : the pyramid is left invariant by rotations of one-, two-, and three-quarters of a full turn around its axis of symmetry, the line connecting the apex to the center of the base; and is also mirror symmetric relative to any perpendicular plane passing through a bisector of the base. It can be represented as the wheel graph , meaning its skeleton can be interpreted as a square in which its four vertices connect a vertex in the center called the universal vertex. It is self-dual, meaning its dual polyhedron is the square pyramid itself.
As a Johnson solid
3D model of a square pyramid as a Johnson solid
If all triangular edges are of equal length, the four triangles are equilateral, and the pyramid's faces are all regular polygons. The dihedral angles between adjacent triangular faces are , and that between the base and each triangular face being half of that, . A convex polyhedron in which all of the faces are regular polygons is called a Johnson solid. Such a square pyramid is among them, enumerated as the first Johnson solid .
Because its edges are all equal in length (that is, ), its slant, height, surface area, and volume can be derived by substituting the formulas of a right pyramid:
An equilateral square pyramid is an elementary polyhedron. This means it cannot be separated by a plane to create two small convex polyhedra with regular faces.
Applications

.jpg?resolution=330px)
In architecture, the pyramids built in ancient Egypt are examples of buildings shaped like square pyramids. Pyramidologists have put forward various suggestions for the design of the Great Pyramid of Giza, including a theory based on the Kepler triangle and the golden ratio. However, modern scholars favor descriptions using integer ratios, as being more consistent with the knowledge of Egyptian mathematics and proportion. The Mesoamerican pyramids are also ancient pyramidal buildings similar to the Egyptian; they differ in having flat tops and stairs ascending their faces. Modern buildings whose designs imitate the Egyptian pyramids include the Louvre Pyramid and the casino hotel Luxor Las Vegas.
In stereochemistry, an atom cluster can have a square pyramidal geometry. A square pyramidal molecule has a main-group element with one active lone pair, which can be described by a model that predicts the geometry of molecules known as VSEPR theory. Examples of molecules with this structure include chlorine pentafluoride, bromine pentafluoride, and iodine pentafluoride.
Related topics


The base of a square pyramid can be attached to a square face of another polyhedron to construct new polyhedra, an example of augmentation. For example, a tetrakis hexahedron can be constructed by attaching the base of an equilateral square pyramid onto each face of a cube. Attaching prisms or antiprisms to pyramids is known as elongation or gyroelongation, respectively. Some of the other Johnson solids can be constructed by either augmenting square pyramids or augmenting other shapes with square pyramids: elongated square pyramid , gyroelongated square pyramid , elongated square bipyramid , gyroelongated square bipyramid , augmented triangular prism , biaugmented triangular prism , triaugmented triangular prism , augmented pentagonal prism , biaugmented pentagonal prism , augmented hexagonal prism , parabiaugmented hexagonal prism , metabiaugmented hexagonal prism , triaugmented hexagonal prism , and augmented sphenocorona .
Square pyramids are the cells of a four-dimensional polytope, the cubic pyramid. This polytope has nine edges, twenty vertices, and eighteen faces (which include twelve triangles and six squares). It has seven cells, consisting of six square pyramids and one cube.
A square pyramidal number is a natural number that counts the number of stacked spheres in a square pyramid. If the pyramid has layers, then it has spheres. The first few terms of this sequence are:
See also
- Regular octahedron or square bipyramid, a polyhedron constructed by attaching two square pyramids base-to-base
References
Notes
- A000330, Square pyramidal numbers, cs2
Works cited
- Alexander, Daniel C., Koeberlin, Geralyn M., 2014, Elementary Geometry for College Students, 6th, Cengage Learning
- Berman, Martin, 1971, Regular-faced convex polyhedra, Journal of the Franklin Institute, 291, 5, 329–352, 10.1016/0016-0032(71)90071-8, 290245
- Beiler, A. H., Recreations in the Theory of Numbers, registration, Dover, 1964, 194–195
- Clissold, Caroline, 2020, Maths 5–11: A Guide for Teachers, Taylor & Francis
- Cromwell, Peter R., Polyhedra, 1997, Cambridge University Press
- Demey, Lorenz, Smessaert, Hans, Logical and Geometrical Distance in Polyhedral Aristotelian Diagrams in Knowledge Representation, Symmetry, 2017, 9, 10, 10.3390/sym9100204, free, 2017Symm....9..204D
- Emeléus, H. J., Harry Julius Emeléus, The Chemistry of Fluorine and Its Compounds, 1969, Academic Press
- Eves, Howard, Howard Eves, 1997, Foundations and Fundamental Concepts of Mathematics, 3rd, Dover Publications
- Feder, Kenneth L., 2010, Encyclopedia of Dubious Archaeology: From Atlantis to the Walam Olum: From Atlantis to the Walam Olum, ABC-CLIO
- Freitag, Mark A., 2014, Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers: A Process Approach, Brooks/Cole
- Hartshorne, Robin, Robin Hartshorne, 2000, Geometry: Euclid and Beyond, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics, Springer-Verlag
- Herz-Fischler, Roger, 2000, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, The Shape of the Great Pyramid
- Hocevar, Franx, 1903, Solid Geometry, A. & C. Black
- Jarvis, Daniel, Naested, Irene, Exploring the Math and Art Connection: Teaching and Learning Between the Lines, 2012, Brush Education
- Johnson, Norman W., Norman W. Johnson, 1966, Convex polyhedra with regular faces, Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 18, 169–200, 10.4153/cjm-1966-021-8, 0185507, 122006114, 0132.14603, free
- Kinsey, L. Christine, L. Christine Kinsey, Moore, Teresa E., Prassidis, Efstratios, Geometry and Symmetry, 2011, John Wiley & Son, s
- Larcombe, H. J., Cambridge Intermediate Mathematics: Geometry Part II, 1929, Cambridge University Press
- Markowsky, George, 1992, Misconceptions about the Golden Ratio, The College Mathematics Journal, 23, 1, 10.2307/2686193, Mathematical Association of America, 2–19, 2686193, 29 June 2012
- O'Keeffe, Michael, Hyde, Bruce G., Crystal Structures: Patterns and Symmetry, 2020, Dover Publications
- Perry, O. W., Perry, J., Mathematics, 1981, Springer, 10.1007/978-1-349-05230-1
- Petrucci, Ralph H., Harwood, William S., Herring, F. Geoffrey, General Chemistry: Principles and Modern Applications, 1, 2002, Prentice Hall
- Pisanski, Tomaž, Servatius, Brigitte, Configuration from a Graphical Viewpoint, 2013, Springer, 10.1007/978-0-8176-8364-1
- Quadling, Douglas, Further Forays into , , Dimensions, The Mathematical Gazette, 91, 522, 2007, 462-468, 10.1017/S0025557200182105, 40378419
- Rajwade, A. R., Convex Polyhedra with Regularity Conditions and Hilbert's Third Problem, Texts and Readings in Mathematics, 2001, Hindustan Book Agency, 10.1007/978-93-86279-06-4
- Rossi, Corinna, Corinna Rossi, Architecture and Mathematics in Ancient Egypt, 2004, Cambridge University Press, 67–68
- Rossi, Corinna, Tout, Christopher A., 2002, Were the Fibonacci series and the Golden Section known in ancient Egypt?, Historia Mathematica, 29, 2, 101–113, 10.1006/hmat.2001.2334, 11311/997099, free
- Simonson, Shai, Rediscovering Mathematics: You Do the Math, 2011, Mathematical Association of America
- Slobodan, Mišić, Obradović, Marija, Ðukanović, Gordana, Composite Concave Cupolae as Geometric and Architectural Forms, 2015, Journal for Geometry and Graphics, 19, 1, 79–91
- Smith, James T., Methods of Geometry, 2000, John Wiley & Sons
- Takacs, Sarolta Anna, Cline, Eric H., 2015, The Ancient World, Routledge
- Uehara, Ryuhei, 2020, Introduction to Computational Origami: The World of New Computational Geometry, Springer, 10.1007/978-981-15-4470-5, 220150682
- Wagner, Donald Blackmore, 1979, An early Chinese derivation of the volume of a pyramid: Liu Hui, third century A.D., Historia Mathematica, 6, 2, 164–188, 10.1016/0315-0860(79)90076-4
- Wohlleben, Eva, Cocchiarella, Luigi, 2019, Duality in Non-Polyhedral Bodies Part I: Polyliner, International Conference on Geometry and Graphics, ICGG 2018 – Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Geometry and Graphics: 40th Anniversary – Milan, Italy, August 3–7, 2018, Springer, 10.1007/978-3-319-95588-9
External links
- Square Pyramid – Interactive Polyhedron Model
- Virtual Reality Polyhedra georgehart.com: The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra (VRML model Archived 7 October 2023, at web.archive.org)
Category:Elementary polyhedron
Category:Johnson solids
Category:Prismatoid polyhedra
Category:Pyramids (geometry)
Category:Self-dual polyhedra
