A surface such as the Möbius Strip on which there exists a closed path such that the directrix is
reversed when moved around this path. The Euler Characteristic of a nonorientable surface is . The real
Projective Plane is also a nonorientable surface, as are the Boy Surface, Cross-Cap, and Roman
Surface, all of which are homeomorphic to the Real Projective Plane (Pinkall 1986). There is a general method for
constructing nonorientable surfaces which proceeds as follows (Banchoff 1984, Pinkall 1986). Choose three
Homogeneous Polynomials of Positive Even degree and consider the Map
(1) |
(2) | |||
(3) | |||
(4) |
In 3-D, there is no unbounded nonorientable surface which does not intersect itself (Kuiper 1961, Pinkall 1986).
See also Boy Surface, Cross-Cap, Möbius Strip, Orientable Surface, Projective Plane, Roman Surface
References
Banchoff, T. ``Differential Geometry and Computer Graphics.'' In Perspectives of Mathematics:
Anniversary of Oberwolfach (Ed. W. Jager, R. Remmert, and J. Moser). Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser, 1984.
Gray, A. ``Nonorientable Surfaces.'' Ch. 12 in Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces.
Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, pp. 229-249, 1993.
Kuiper, N. H. ``Convex Immersion of Closed Surfaces in .'' Comment. Math. Helv. 35, 85-92, 1961.
Pinkall, U. ``Models of the Real Projective Plane.'' Ch. 6 in
Mathematical Models from the Collections of Universities and Museums (Ed. G. Fischer).
Braunschweig, Germany: Vieweg, pp. 63-67, 1986.
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein