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OCTA

Octa is a combining form derived from Greek okto- and Latin octa- meaning eight. It appears in a wide range of scientific and mathematical terms to indicate eight units, positions, or components. The prefix is common in both specialized terminology and everyday language.

In geometry and crystallography, octa refers to shapes and symmetries associated with eight parts. The octahedron,

In biology and biochemistry, octa- appears in terms describing eight-subunit assemblies. An octamer is a protein

Beyond specific structures, octa- forms part of several widely used terms. Octagon denotes an eight-sided polygon,

a
regular
Platonic
solid,
has
eight
triangular
faces,
six
vertices,
and
twelve
edges;
it
is
the
dual
of
the
cube
and
exhibits
high
symmetry.
In
crystal
chemistry
and
coordination
chemistry,
octahedral
describes
a
geometry
in
which
six
ligands
are
arranged
at
the
corners
of
an
octahedron
around
a
central
atom,
a
common
arrangement
for
many
transition
metal
complexes.
The
associated
symmetry
is
Oh.
complex
composed
of
eight
subunits;
a
well-known
example
is
the
histone
octamer
around
which
DNA
is
wound
to
form
the
nucleosome
core
particle.
octant
designates
one-eighth
of
a
sphere
or
of
a
coordinate
space,
and
octal
refers
to
the
base-8
numeral
system.
Overall,
octa
serves
as
a
versatile
prefix
to
convey
the
idea
of
eight
in
diverse
scientific
and
mathematical
contexts.