382]
NOTE ON THE TETRAHEDRON.
559
Or it may be constructed even more simply as follows : viz. if AB'CD' and
A'BG'D be parallel faces of any rectangular parallelopiped (the angles A and A',
B and B', G and C, D and D' being respectively opposite to each other), then ABGD
or A'B'G'D' is a tetrahedron of the form in question. The consideration of the
rectangular parallelopiped puts in evidence the foregoing geometrical property.
In such a tetrahedron the line joining the centres of a pair of opposite sides
is in the language of Bravais, see his “ Mémoire sur les polyèdres de forme symétrique,”
Liouville, t. xiv. (1849), pp. 141—180, a binary axis of symmetry: viz. the figure is
not altered by turning it round such axis through an angle = ^360°. There are thus
three such axes at right angles to each other, but the figure has not any centre of
symmetry, nor (assuming that it is not further particularised) any plane of symmetry :
each of the three axes is a principal axis, and the figure belongs to the sixth of
Bravais’ twenty-three classes of polyhedra, see the table p. 179. It was in fact by
seeking to construct a figure of this class that I was led to the investigation.