[A person offering a second person a Klein bottle. The second person rejects the Klein bottle. They have a plate of regular three dimensional shapes in front of them. They have picked up a rectangular prism on their fork. In the upper left corner is the text: “No! A responsible adult says no to non-orientable shapes”]
Where can I read more about this?
I think that’s called a Boy’s Surface. There is a different animation of the same object in the Wikipedia article. It’s a disk with a mobius strip glued to its edge, but most articles get too mathsy too quickly for me to understand, so that’s all the information I can provide :3
This is about as accessible as it can get: https://faculty.math.illinois.edu/~jms/Papers/isama/eversions.pdf
The magic happens at the center-point of the surface where the three self-intersections meet. When you ply the surface apart, a tiny cube forms at the triple-point and begins to grow.
Morin’s surface is slightly less complex than splitting the boy’s surface apart, in that sphere eversion halfway model, a trapezoid forms instead of a cube. Inverting a trapezoid in this way is the minimum complexity required to turn a sphere inside out.
Videos I enjoy:
Outside in , which uses a technique different than those above (there’s also a parody out there where the narrators get snarky at eachother)
The optiverse , which uses Morin’s surface mentioned above, but is as ‘smooth’ as mathematically possible.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/OI-To1eUtuU
https://piped.video/cdMLLmlS4Dc
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
that’s fantastic… and i watched the videos, and it still looks like black magic…