Space diagonal
In geometry, a space diagonal of a polyhedron is a line connecting two vertices that are not on the same face. Space diagonals contrast with face diagonals, which connect vertices on the same face as each other.
For example, a pyramid has no space diagonals, while a cube or more generally a parallelepiped has four space diagonals.
Axial diagonal
An axial diagonal is a space diagonal that passes through the center of a polyhedron.For example, in a cube with edge length a, all four space diagonals are axial diagonals, of common length More generally, a cuboid with edge lengths a, b, and c has all four space diagonals axial, with common length
A regular octahedron has 3 axial diagonals, of length, with edge length a.
A regular icosahedron has 6 axial diagonals of length, where is the golden ratio.