A three-dimensional tessellation is when shapes fill all the space around you, like blocks in a puzzle that never end.
Imagine you have a big box full of tiny cubes, like building blocks. If you stack them neatly next to each other, they fit perfectly without any gaps or overlaps. That's a tessellation in 3D! It’s just like how the bricks in a wall are lined up so tightly that there is no space between them.
Like a Never-Ending Cube Stack
If you think about a child’s toy, those little cubes they use to build towers and houses, now imagine that tower goes on forever, not just up, but also sideways and deep into the ground. That endless cube world is a three-dimensional tessellation of cubes.
Other Shapes Can Do It Too
It's not only cubes! You can have shapes like pyramids or octagons fill space around you too, as long as they fit together perfectly with no gaps. Just like how floor tiles cover the whole floor, but in 3D!
So a three-dimensional tessellation is like an endless world made of repeating shapes that fit together in every direction, just like stacking blocks that never stop!
Examples
- A child stacking blocks to fill a box completely without any gaps.
- Filling up a room with identical boxes that fit perfectly together.
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See also
- What is polyhedra?
- How Does Merging 3D Shapes – How I Finally Got It Work?
- What Is The Most Efficient Way To Stack Spheres?
- What Is the Most Efficient Shape in Nature?
- What Is the Secret Behind the Magic of Pi?