In geometry, the rectified truncated icosahedron is a convex polyhedron.
It is constructed as a rectified, truncated icosahedron, rectification truncating vertices down to mid-edges.
As a near-miss Johnson solid, under icosahedral symmetry, the pentagons are always regular, although the hexagons, while having equal edge lengths, do not have the same edge lengths with the pentagons, having slightly different but alternating angles, causing the triangles to be isosceles instead.
By Conway polyhedron notation, the dual polyhedron can be called a joined truncated icosahedron, jtI, but it is topologically equivalent to the rhombic enneacontahedron with all rhombic faces.
Further truncation, and alternation operations creates two more polyhedra: This polyhedron-related article is a stub.