Regular octahedron
In geometry, a regular octahedron is a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at each vertex. Regular octahedra occur in nature as crystal structures. An octahedron, more generally, can be any eight-sided polyhedron; many types of irregular octahedra also exist.
A regular octahedron is convex, meaning that for any two points within it, the line segment connecting them lies entirely within it. It is one of the eight convex deltahedra because all of the faces are equilateral triangles. It is a composite polyhedron made by attaching two equilateral square pyramids. Its dual polyhedron is the cube, and they have the same three-dimensional symmetry groups, the octahedral symmetry .
A regular octahedron is the three-dimensional case of the more general concept of a cross-polytope.