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Article Published: 25 September 2014 High-resolution liquid patterns via three-dimensional droplet shape control Rishi Raj, Solomon Adera, Ryan Enright & Evelyn N. Wang Nature Communications 5 ...
Carnegie Mellon researchers have created a method that generates knitting patterns for arbitrary 3D shapes, opening the possibility of “on-demand knitting.” Think 3D printing, but softer.
A new shape called an einstein has taken the math world by storm. The craggy, hat-shaped tile can cover an infinite plane with patterns that never repeat.
Triangles, squares, rectangles and pentagons are examples of polygons. A polyhedron is a 3D shape with faces made from polygons. Cubes, cuboids, tetrahedron and prisms are examples of polyhedra.
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