Chiricosahedron

The chiricosahedron, ki, or compound of five tetrahedra is a uniform polyhedron compound. It consists of 20 triangles, 3 joining at each vertex. As the name suggests, it is chiral.

This compound is sometimes considered to be regular, but it is not flag-transitive, despite the fact it is vertex-, edge-, and face-transitive. It is, however, pseudoregular.

Its quotient prismatic equivalent is the tetrahedral pentachoroorthowedge, which is seven-dimensional.

Vertex coordinates
Coordinates for the vertices of a chiricosahedron of edge length 1 are given by:

plus all even permutations of:
 * (±$\sqrt{6}$/4, ±$\sqrt{6}$/4, ±$\sqrt{2}$/4),
 * (±($\sqrt{2}$+$\sqrt{2}$)/8, ±$\sqrt{2}$/4, ±($\sqrt{2}$-$\sqrt{10}$)/8).

Related polyhedra
The icosicosahedron is a compound of the two opposite chiral forms of the chiricosahedron.