Math, asked by vaishalisharma3242, 2 months ago

The Eulers formula for any polyhedron is​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

This theorem involves Euler's polyhedral formula (sometimes called Euler's formula). Today we would state this result as: The number of vertices V, faces F, and edges E in a convex 3-dimensional polyhedron, satisfy V + F - E = 2.

Answered by CloseEncounter
5

\bold{\red{Euler’s\: Formula :}}

According to Euler’s formula for any convex polyhedron, the number of Faces (F) and vertices (V) added together is exactly two more than the number of edges (E).

\bold{\green{F + V = 2 + E}}

hope it helps ☺️☺️

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