Zonogon
In geometry, a zonogon is a centrally-symmetric, convex polygon. Equivalently, it is a convex polygon whose sides can be grouped into parallel pairs with equal lengths and opposite orientations, the two-dimensional analog of a zonohedron.
Examples
A regular polygon is a zonogon if and only if it has an even number of sides. Thus, the square, regular hexagon, and regular octagon are all zonogons.The four-sided zonogons are the square, the rectangles, the rhombi, and the parallelograms.
Tiling and equidissection
The four-sided and six-sided zonogons are parallelogons, able to tile the plane by translated copies of themselves, and all convex parallelogons have this form.Every -sided zonogon can be tiled by parallelograms. In this tiling, there is a parallelogram for each pair of slopes of sides in the -sided zonogon. At least three of the zonogon's vertices must be vertices of only one of the parallelograms in any such tiling. For instance, the regular octagon can be tiled by two squares and four 45° rhombi.
In a generalization of Monsky's theorem, proved that no zonogon has an equidissection into an odd number of equal-area triangles.
Other properties
In an -sided zonogon, at most pairs of vertices can be at unit distance from each other. There exist -sided zonogons withunit-distance pairs.