Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to...

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Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds

Transcript of Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to...

Page 1: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Geometry out of the Paper

Dr. Jessica Purcell

University of Texas at Austin

An Introduction to Manifolds

Page 2: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Based on map of St. Isidore of Seville

600-636 A.D.

“The earth is named from its roundness

(orbis) which is like a wheel. For the Ocean flows round it on all

sides and encircles itsboundaries.”

10th Century Map

Page 3: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Dimension

“measurement in length, width, and thickness” --Dictionary.com

Page 4: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

0-dimensionsA point.

1-dimensionA line.

Page 5: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

2-dimensionsA plane.

2 coordinates: (x,y)

Page 6: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

3-dimensionsSpace.

3 coordinates: (x,y,z)

Page 7: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

4-dimensions? Space and time.

4 coordinates: (x, y, z, w)

5-dimensions? ? ? ?

5 coordinates: (x, y, z, w, t)

Page 8: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

n-dimensional manifold

Any point has a neighborhood that looks like a region in n-dimensional space.

A circle is a 1-dimensional manifold.

x2 + y2 = 1

Page 9: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

A sphere is a 2-dimensional manifold.

Sphere

x2 + y2 + z2 = 1

Page 10: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

3-Sphere

3-dimensional manifold

x2 + y2 + z2 + w2 = 1

Page 11: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Manifold with boundaryEvery point has a neighborhood that either:

• looks like a region in n-dimensional space, or

• looks like a region in n-dimensional half space.

A disk is a 2-manifold with boundary a circle.

Page 12: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Activity 1

Building manifolds.

Page 13: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Cylinder

Page 14: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Torus

Page 15: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Moebius Band

- M. C. Escher

Page 16: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Klein Bottle

http://www.gakushuin.ac.jp/~881791/kuroki/Klein.GIF

Page 17: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

What’s the difference?

Cylinder

• Two boundaries

• Two sides

Moebius strip

• One boundary

• One side

Page 18: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

What’s the difference? (II)

Torus

• 0 boundaries

• 2 sides

Klein bottle

• 0 boundaries

• 1 side

Page 19: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

What’s the difference? (III)

Sphere

• 0 boundaries

• 2 sides

Torus

• 0 boundaries

• 2 sides

Page 20: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Break

Page 21: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Activity 2

Euler’s Formula

Page 22: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Example

Page 23: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Example

v=3; e=3; f=2.

Page 24: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Answer to #7: 2

Is the answer really always 2, or did it just happen that none of us drew the right picture to get something besides 2?

Mathematical proof: Show that no matter how many vertices, edges and faces we have, if we follow the rules, then

v – e + f = 2

Page 25: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Cauchy’s Proof of Euler’s Formula

• If there is any face with more than 3 sides, draw a diagonal. Repeat. Eventually, everything is divided into triangles.

Page 26: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Cauchy’s Proof Continued

• Repeat the following two steps:1. Remove triangles with one edge on the exterior.

2. Remove triangles with two edges on exterior.

Page 27: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Cauchy’s Proof Concluded

• You are left with triangles with 3 exterior edges only. This looks like my example.

Page 28: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Euler Characteristic for Moebius Strip

v=? e=? f=?

v – e + f = ?

Page 29: Geometry out of the Paper Dr. Jessica Purcell University of Texas at Austin An Introduction to Manifolds.

Concluding Remarks

• To a bug on an n-dimensional manifold, the world looks n-dimensional.

• It is hard to tell manifolds apart when you’re standing inside them.

• Different manifolds have many different interesting properties. Keep exploring!