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Möbius strip

In mathematics, a Möbius strip, Möbius band, or Möbius loop[a] is a surface that can be formed by attaching the ends of a strip of paper together with a half-twist. As a mathematical object, it was discovered by Johann Benedict Listing and August Ferdinand Möbius in 1858, but it had already appeared in Roman mosaics from the third century CE. The Möbius strip is a non-orientable surface, meaning that within it one cannot consistently distinguish clockwise from counterclockwise turns. Every non-orientable surface contains a Möbius strip.

A Möbius strip made with paper and adhesive tape

As an abstract topological space, the Möbius strip can be embedded into three-dimensional Euclidean space in many different ways: a clockwise half-twist is different from a counterclockwise half-twist, and it can also be embedded with odd numbers of twists greater than one, or with a knotted centerline. Any two embeddings with the same knot for the centerline and the same number and direction of twists are topologically equivalent. All of these embeddings have only one side, but when embedded in other spaces, the Möbius strip may have two sides. It has only a single boundary curve.

Several geometric constructions of the Möbius strip provide it with additional structure. It can be swept as a ruled surface by a line segment rotating in a rotating plane, with or without self-crossings. A thin paper strip with its ends joined to form a Möbius strip can bend smoothly as a developable surface or be folded flat; the flattened Möbius strips include the trihexaflexagon. The Sudanese Möbius strip is a minimal surface in a hypersphere, and the Meeks Möbius strip is a self-intersecting minimal surface in ordinary Euclidean space. Both the Sudanese Möbius strip and another self-intersecting Möbius strip, the cross-cap, have a circular boundary. A Möbius strip without its boundary, called an open Möbius strip, can form surfaces of constant curvature. Certain highly-symmetric spaces whose points represent lines in the plane have the shape of a Möbius strip.

The many applications of Möbius strips include mechanical belts that wear evenly on both sides, dual-track roller coasters whose carriages alternate between the two tracks, and world maps printed so that antipodes appear opposite each other. Möbius strips appear in molecules and devices with novel electrical and electromechanical properties, and have been used to prove impossibility results in social choice theory. In popular culture, Möbius strips appear in artworks by M. C. Escher, Max Bill, and others, and in the design of the recycling symbol. Many architectural concepts have been inspired by the Möbius strip, including the building design for the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Performers including Harry Blackstone Sr. and Thomas Nelson Downs have based stage magic tricks on the properties of the Möbius strip. The canons of J. S. Bach have been analyzed using Möbius strips. Many works of speculative fiction feature Möbius strips; more generally, a plot structure based on the Möbius strip, of events that repeat with a twist, is common in fiction.

History edit

 
Mosaic from ancient Sentinum depicting Aion holding a Möbius strip
 
Chain pump with a Möbius drive chain, by Ismail al-Jazari (1206)

The discovery of the Möbius strip as a mathematical object is attributed independently to the German mathematicians Johann Benedict Listing and August Ferdinand Möbius in 1858.[2] However, it had been known long before, both as a physical object and in artistic depictions; in particular, it can be seen in several Roman mosaics from the third century CE.[3][4] In many cases these merely depict coiled ribbons as boundaries. When the number of coils is odd, these ribbons are Möbius strips, but for an even number of coils they are topologically equivalent to untwisted rings. Therefore, whether the ribbon is a Möbius strip may be coincidental, rather than a deliberate choice. In at least one case, a ribbon with different colors on different sides was drawn with an odd number of coils, forcing its artist to make a clumsy fix at the point where the colors did not match up.[3] Another mosaic from the town of Sentinum (depicted) shows the zodiac, held by the god Aion, as a band with only a single twist. There is no clear evidence that the one-sidedness of this visual representation of celestial time was intentional; it could have been chosen merely as a way to make all of the signs of the zodiac appear on the visible side of the strip. Some other ancient depictions of the ourobouros or of figure-eight-shaped decorations are also alleged to depict Möbius strips, but whether they were intended to depict flat strips of any type is unclear.[4]

Independently of the mathematical tradition, machinists have long known that mechanical belts wear half as quickly when they form Möbius strips, because they use the entire surface of the belt rather than only the inner surface of an untwisted belt.[3] Additionally, such a belt may be less prone to curling from side to side. An early written description of this technique dates to 1871, which is after the first mathematical publications regarding the Möbius strip. Much earlier, an image of a chain pump in a work of Ismail al-Jazari from 1206 depicts a Möbius strip configuration for its drive chain.[4] Another use of this surface was made by seamstresses in Paris (at an unspecified date): they initiated novices by requiring them to stitch a Möbius strip as a collar onto a garment.[3]

Properties edit

 
A 2D object traversing once around the Möbius strip returns in mirrored form

The Möbius strip has several curious properties. It is a non-orientable surface: if an asymmetric two-dimensional object slides one time around the strip, it returns to its starting position as its mirror image. In particular, a curved arrow pointing clockwise (↻) would return as an arrow pointing counterclockwise (↺), implying that, within the Möbius strip, it is impossible to consistently define what it means to be clockwise or counterclockwise. It is the simplest non-orientable surface: any other surface is non-orientable if and only if it has a Möbius strip as a subset.[5] Relatedly, when embedded into Euclidean space, the Möbius strip has only one side. A three-dimensional object that slides one time around the surface of the strip is not mirrored, but instead returns to the same point of the strip on what appears locally to be its other side, showing that both positions are really part of a single side. This behavior is different from familiar orientable surfaces in three dimensions such as those modeled by flat sheets of paper, cylindrical drinking straws, or hollow balls, for which one side of the surface is not connected to the other.[6] However, this is a property of its embedding into space rather than an intrinsic property of the Möbius strip itself: there exist other topological spaces in which the Möbius strip can be embedded so that it has two sides.[7] For instance, if the front and back faces of a cube are glued to each other with a left-right mirror reflection, the result is a three-dimensional topological space (the Cartesian product of a Möbius strip with an interval) in which the top and bottom halves of the cube can be separated from each other by a two-sided Möbius strip.[b] In contrast to disks, spheres, and cylinders, for which it is possible to simultaneously embed an uncountable set of disjoint copies into three-dimensional space, only a countable number of Möbius strips can be simultaneously embedded.[9][10][11]

A path along the edge of a Möbius strip, traced until it returns to its starting point on the edge, includes all boundary points of the Möbius strip in a single continuous curve. For a Möbius strip formed by gluing and twisting a rectangle, it has twice the length of the centerline of the strip. In this sense, the Möbius strip is different from an untwisted ring and like a circular disk in having only one boundary.[6] A Möbius strip in Euclidean space cannot be moved or stretched into its mirror image; it is a chiral object with right- or left-handedness.[12] Möbius strips with odd numbers of half-twists greater than one, or that are knotted before gluing, are distinct as embedded subsets of three-dimensional space, even though they are all equivalent as two-dimensional topological surfaces.[13] More precisely, two Möbius strips are equivalently embedded in three-dimensional space when their centerlines determine the same knot and they have the same number of twists as each other.[14] With an even number of twists, however, one obtains a different topological surface, called the annulus.[15]

The Möbius strip can be continuously transformed into its centerline, by making it narrower while fixing the points on the centerline. This transformation is an example of a deformation retraction, and its existence means that the Möbius strip has many of the same properties as its centerline, which is topologically a circle. In particular, its fundamental group is the same as the fundamental group of a circle, an infinite cyclic group. Therefore, paths on the Möbius strip that start and end at the same point can be distinguished topologically (up to homotopy) only by the number of times they loop around the strip.[16]

 
Cutting the centerline produces a double-length two-sided (non-Möbius) strip
 
A single off-center cut produces a Möbius strip (purple) linked with a double-length two-sided strip

Cutting a Möbius strip along the centerline with a pair of scissors yields one long strip with four half-twists in it (relative to an untwisted annulus or cylinder) rather than two separate strips. Two of the half-twists come from the fact that this thinner strip goes two times through the half-twist in the original Möbius strip, and the other two come from the way the two halves of the thinner strip wrap around each other. The result is not a Möbius strip, but instead is topologically equivalent to a cylinder. Cutting this double-twisted strip again along its centerline produces two linked double-twisted strips. If, instead, a Möbius strip is cut lengthwise, a third of the way across its width, it produces two linked strips. One of the two is a central, thinner, Möbius strip, while the other has two half-twists.[6] These interlinked shapes, formed by lengthwise slices of Möbius strips with varying widths, are sometimes called paradromic rings.[17][18]

 
Subdivision into six mutually-adjacent regions, bounded by Tietze's graph
 
Solution to the three utilities problem on a Möbius strip

The Möbius strip can be cut into six mutually-adjacent regions, showing that maps on the surface of the Möbius strip can sometimes require six colors, in contrast to the four color theorem for the plane.[19] Six colors are always enough. This result is part of the Ringel–Youngs theorem, which states how many colors each topological surface needs.[20] The edges and vertices of these six regions form Tietze's graph, which is a dual graph on this surface for the six-vertex complete graph but cannot be drawn without crossings on a plane. Another family of graphs that can be embedded on the Möbius strip, but not on the plane, are the Möbius ladders, the boundaries of subdivisions of the Möbius strip into rectangles meeting end-to-end.[21] These include the utility graph, a six-vertex complete bipartite graph whose embedding into the Möbius strip shows that, unlike in the plane, the three utilities problem can be solved on a transparent Möbius strip.[22] The Euler characteristic of the Möbius strip is zero, meaning that for any subdivision of the strip by vertices and edges into regions, the numbers  ,  , and   of vertices, edges, and regions satisfy  . For instance, Tietze's graph has   vertices,   edges, and   regions;  .[19]

Constructions edit

There are many different ways of defining geometric surfaces with the topology of the Möbius strip, yielding realizations with additional geometric properties.

Sweeping a line segment edit

 
A Möbius strip swept out by a rotating line segment in a rotating plane
 
Plücker's conoid swept out by a different motion of a line segment

One way to embed the Möbius strip in three-dimensional Euclidean space is to sweep it out by a line segment rotating in a plane, which in turn rotates around one of its lines.[23] For the swept surface to meet up with itself after a half-twist, the line segment should rotate around its center at half the angular velocity of the plane's rotation. This can be described as a parametric surface defined by equations for the Cartesian coordinates of its points,

 
for   and  , where one parameter   describes the rotation angle of the plane around its central axis and the other parameter   describes the position of a point along the rotating line segment. This produces a Möbius strip of width 1, whose center circle has radius 1, lies in the  -plane and is centered at  .[24] The same method can produce Möbius strips with any odd number of half-twists, by rotating the segment more quickly in its plane. The rotating segment sweeps out a circular disk in the plane that it rotates within, and the Möbius strip that it generates forms a slice through the solid torus swept out by this disk. Because of the one-sidedness of this slice, the sliced torus remains connected.[25]

A line or line segment swept in a different motion, rotating in a horizontal plane around the origin as it moves up and down, forms Plücker's conoid or cylindroid, an algebraic ruled surface in the form of a self-crossing Möbius strip.[26] It has applications in the design of gears.[27]

Polyhedral surfaces and flat foldings edit

 
Trihexaflexagon being flexed

A strip of paper can form a flattened Möbius strip in the plane by folding it at   angles so that its center line lies along an equilateral triangle, and attaching the ends. The shortest strip for which this is possible consists of three equilateral triangles, folded at the edges where two triangles meet. Its aspect ratio – the ratio of the strip's length[c] to its width – is  , and the same folding method works for any larger aspect ratio.[28][29] For a strip of nine equilateral triangles, the result is a trihexaflexagon, which can be flexed to reveal different parts of its surface.[30] For strips too short to apply this method directly, one can first "accordion fold" the strip in its wide direction back and forth using an even number of folds. With two folds, for example, a   strip would become a   folded strip whose cross section is in the shape of an 'N' and would remain an 'N' after a half-twist. The narrower accordion-folded strip can then be folded and joined in the same way that a longer strip would be.[28][29]

 
 
Five-vertex polyhedral and flat-folded Möbius strips

The Möbius strip can also be embedded as a polyhedral surface in space or flat-folded in the plane, with only five triangular faces sharing five vertices. In this sense, it is simpler than the cylinder, which requires six triangles and six vertices, even when represented more abstractly as a simplicial complex.[31][d] A five-triangle Möbius strip can be represented most symmetrically by five of the ten equilateral triangles of a four-dimensional regular simplex. This four-dimensional polyhedral Möbius strip is the only tight Möbius strip, one that is fully four-dimensional and for which all cuts by hyperplanes separate it into two parts that are topologically equivalent to disks or circles.[32]

Other polyhedral embeddings of Möbius strips include one with four convex quadrilaterals as faces, another with three non-convex quadrilateral faces,[33] and one using the vertices and center point of a regular octahedron, with a triangular boundary.[34] Every abstract triangulation of the projective plane can be embedded into 3D as a polyhedral Möbius strip with a triangular boundary after removing one of its faces;[35] an example is the six-vertex projective plane obtained by adding one vertex to the five-vertex Möbius strip, connected by triangles to each of its boundary edges.[31] However, not every abstract triangulation of the Möbius strip can be represented geometrically, as a polyhedral surface.[36] To be realizable, it is necessary and sufficient that there be no two disjoint non-contractible 3-cycles in the triangulation.[37]

Smoothly embedded rectangles edit

A rectangular Möbius strip, made by attaching the ends of a paper rectangle, can be embedded smoothly into three-dimensional space whenever its aspect ratio is greater than  , the same ratio as for the flat-folded equilateral-triangle version of the Möbius strip.[38] This flat triangular embedding can lift to a smooth[e] embedding in three dimensions, in which the strip lies flat in three parallel planes between three cylindrical rollers, each tangent to two of the planes.[38] Mathematically, a smoothly embedded sheet of paper can be modeled as a developable surface, that can bend but cannot stretch.[39][40] As its aspect ratio decreases toward  , all smooth embeddings seem to approach the same triangular form.[41]

The lengthwise folds of an accordion-folded flat Möbius strip prevent it from forming a three-dimensional embedding in which the layers are separated from each other and bend smoothly without crumpling or stretching away from the folds.[29] Instead, unlike in the flat-folded case, there is a lower limit to the aspect ratio of smooth rectangular Möbius strips. Their aspect ratio cannot be less than  , even if self-intersections are allowed. Self-intersecting smooth Möbius strips exist for any aspect ratio above this bound.[29][42] Without self-intersections, the aspect ratio must be at least[43]

 
Unsolved problem in mathematics:

Can a   paper rectangle be glued end-to-end to form a smooth Möbius strip embedded in space? [f]

For aspect ratios between this bound and  , it has been an open problem whether smooth embeddings, without self-intersection, exist.[29][42][43] In 2023, Richard Schwartz announced a proof that they do not exist, but this result still awaits peer review and publication.[44][45] If the requirement of smoothness is relaxed to allow continuously differentiable surfaces, the Nash–Kuiper theorem implies that any two opposite edges of any rectangle can be glued to form an embedded Möbius strip, no matter how small the aspect ratio becomes.[g] The limiting case, a surface obtained from an infinite strip of the plane between two parallel lines, glued with the opposite orientation to each other, is called the unbounded Möbius strip or the real tautological line bundle.[46] Although it has no smooth closed embedding into three-dimensional space, it can be embedded smoothly as a closed subset of four-dimensional Euclidean space.[47]

The minimum-energy shape of a smooth Möbius strip glued from a rectangle does not have a known analytic description, but can be calculated numerically, and has been the subject of much study in plate theory since the initial work on this subject in 1930 by Michael Sadowsky.[39][40] It is also possible to find algebraic surfaces that contain rectangular developable Möbius strips.[48][49]

Making the boundary circular edit

 
Gluing two Möbius strips to form a Klein bottle
 
A projection of the Sudanese Möbius strip

The edge, or boundary, of a Möbius strip is topologically equivalent to a circle. In common forms of the Möbius strip, it has a different shape from a circle, but it is unknotted, and therefore the whole strip can be stretched without crossing itself to make the edge perfectly circular.[50] One such example is based on the topology of the Klein bottle, a one-sided surface with no boundary that cannot be embedded into three-dimensional space, but can be immersed (allowing the surface to cross itself in certain restricted ways). A Klein bottle is the surface that results when two Möbius strips are glued together edge-to-edge, and – reversing that process – a Klein bottle can be sliced along a carefully chosen cut to produce two Möbius strips.[51] For a form of the Klein bottle known as Lawson's Klein bottle, the curve along which it is sliced can be made circular, resulting in Möbius strips with circular edges.[52]

Lawson's Klein bottle is a self-crossing minimal surface in the unit hypersphere of 4-dimensional space, the set of points of the form

 
for  .[53] Half of this Klein bottle, the subset with  , gives a Möbius strip embedded in the hypersphere as a minimal surface with a great circle as its boundary.[54] This embedding is sometimes called the "Sudanese Möbius strip" after topologists Sue Goodman and Daniel Asimov, who discovered it in the 1970s.[55] Geometrically Lawson's Klein bottle can be constructed by sweeping a great circle through a great-circular motion in the 3-sphere, and the Sudanese Möbius strip is obtained by sweeping a semicircle instead of a circle, or equivalently by slicing the Klein bottle along a circle that is perpendicular to all of the swept circles.[52][56] Stereographic projection transforms this shape from a three-dimensional spherical space into three-dimensional Euclidean space, preserving the circularity of its boundary.[52] The most symmetric projection is obtained by using a projection point that lies on that great circle that runs through the midpoint of each of the semicircles, but produces an unbounded embedding with the projection point removed from its centerline.[54] Instead, leaving the Sudanese Möbius strip unprojected, in the 3-sphere, leaves it with an infinite group of symmetries isomorphic to the orthogonal group  , the group of symmetries of a circle.[53]
 
Schematic depiction of a cross-cap with an open bottom, showing its level sets. This surface crosses itself along the vertical line segment.

The Sudanese Möbius strip extends on all sides of its boundary circle, unavoidably if the surface is to avoid crossing itself. Another form of the Möbius strip, called the cross-cap or crosscap, also has a circular boundary, but otherwise stays on only one side of the plane of this circle,[57] making it more convenient for attaching onto circular holes in other surfaces. In order to do so, it crosses itself. It can be formed by removing a quadrilateral from the top of a hemisphere, orienting the edges of the quadrilateral in alternating directions, and then gluing opposite pairs of these edges consistently with this orientation.[58] The two parts of the surface formed by the two glued pairs of edges cross each other with a pinch point like that of a Whitney umbrella at each end of the crossing segment,[59] the same topological structure seen in Plücker's conoid.[26]

Surfaces of constant curvature edit

The open Möbius strip is the relative interior of a standard Möbius strip, formed by omitting the points on its boundary edge. It may be given a Riemannian geometry of constant positive, negative, or zero Gaussian curvature. The cases of negative and zero curvature form geodesically complete surfaces, which means that all geodesics ("straight lines" on the surface) may be extended indefinitely in either direction.

Zero curvature
An open strip with zero curvature may be constructed by gluing the opposite sides of a plane strip between two parallel lines, described above as the tautological line bundle.[46] The resulting metric makes the open Möbius strip into a (geodesically) complete flat surface (i.e., having zero Gaussian curvature everywhere). This is the unique metric on the Möbius strip, up to uniform scaling, that is both flat and complete. It is the quotient space of a plane by a glide reflection, and (together with the plane, cylinder, torus, and Klein bottle) is one of only five two-dimensional complete flat manifolds.[60]
Negative curvature
The open Möbius strip also admits complete metrics of constant negative curvature. One way to see this is to begin with the upper half plane (Poincaré) model of the hyperbolic plane, a geometry of constant curvature whose lines are represented in the model by semicircles that meet the  -axis at right angles. Take the subset of the upper half-plane between any two nested semicircles, and identify the outer semicircle with the left-right reversal of the inner semicircle. The result is topologically a complete and non-compact Möbius strip with constant negative curvature. It is a "nonstandard" complete hyperbolic surface in the sense that it contains a complete hyperbolic half-plane (actually two, on opposite sides of the axis of glide-reflection), and is one of only 13 nonstandard surfaces.[61] Again, this can be understood as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by a glide reflection.[62]
Positive curvature
A Möbius strip of constant positive curvature cannot be complete, since it is known that the only complete surfaces of constant positive curvature are the sphere and the projective plane.[60] However, in a sense it is only one point away from being a complete surface, as the open Möbius strip is homeomorphic to the once-punctured projective plane, the surface obtained by removing any one point from the projective plane.[63]

The minimal surfaces are described as having constant zero mean curvature instead of constant Gaussian curvature. The Sudanese Möbius strip was constructed as a minimal surface bounded by a great circle in a 3-sphere, but there is also a unique complete (boundaryless) minimal surface immersed in Euclidean space that has the topology of an open Möbius strip. It is called the Meeks Möbius strip,[64] after its 1982 description by William Hamilton Meeks, III.[65] Although globally unstable as a minimal surface, small patches of it, bounded by non-contractible curves within the surface, can form stable embedded Möbius strips as minimal surfaces.[66] Both the Meeks Möbius strip, and every higher-dimensional minimal surface with the topology of the Möbius strip, can be constructed using solutions to the Björling problem, which defines a minimal surface uniquely from its boundary curve and tangent planes along this curve.[67]

Spaces of lines edit

The family of lines in the plane can be given the structure of a smooth space, with each line represented as a point in this space. The resulting space of lines is topologically equivalent to the open Möbius strip.[68] One way to see this is to extend the Euclidean plane to the real projective plane by adding one more line, the line at infinity. By projective duality the space of lines in the projective plane is equivalent to its space of points, the projective plane itself. Removing the line at infinity, to produce the space of Euclidean lines, punctures this space of projective lines.[69] Therefore, the space of Euclidean lines is a punctured projective plane, which is one of the forms of the open Möbius strip.[63] The space of lines in the hyperbolic plane can be parameterized by unordered pairs of distinct points on a circle, the pairs of points at infinity of each line. This space, again, has the topology of an open Möbius strip.[70]

These spaces of lines are highly symmetric. The symmetries of Euclidean lines include the affine transformations, and the symmetries of hyperbolic lines include the Möbius transformations.[71] The affine transformations and Möbius transformations both form 6-dimensional Lie groups, topological spaces having a compatible algebraic structure describing the composition of symmetries.[72][73] Because every line in the plane is symmetric to every other line, the open Möbius strip is a homogeneous space, a space with symmetries that take every point to every other point. Homogeneous spaces of Lie groups are called solvmanifolds, and the Möbius strip can be used as a counterexample, showing that not every solvmanifold is a nilmanifold, and that not every solvmanifold can be factored into a direct product of a compact solvmanifold with  . These symmetries also provide another way to construct the Möbius strip itself, as a group model of these Lie groups. A group model consists of a Lie group and a stabilizer subgroup of its action; contracting the cosets of the subgroup to points produces a space with the same topology as the underlying homogenous space. In the case of the symmetries of Euclidean lines, the stabilizer of the  -axis consists of all symmetries that take the axis to itself. Each line   corresponds to a coset, the set of symmetries that map   to the  -axis. Therefore, the quotient space, a space that has one point per coset and inherits its topology from the space of symmetries, is the same as the space of lines, and is again an open Möbius strip.[74]

Applications edit

 
Electrical flow in a Möbius resistor

Beyond the already-discussed applications of Möbius strips to the design of mechanical belts that wear evenly on their entire surface, and of the Plücker conoid to the design of gears, other applications of Möbius strips include:

  • Graphene ribbons twisted to form Möbius strips with new electronic characteristics including helical magnetism[75]
  • Möbius aromaticity, a property of organic chemicals whose molecular structure forms a cycle, with molecular orbitals aligned along the cycle in the pattern of a Möbius strip[76][77]
  • The Möbius resistor, a strip of conductive material covering the single side of a dielectric Möbius strip, in a way that cancels its own self-inductance[78][79]
  • Resonators with a compact design and a resonant frequency that is half that of identically constructed linear coils[80][81]
  • Polarization patterns in light emerging from a q-plate[82]
  • A proof of the impossibility of continuous, anonymous, and unanimous two-party aggregation rules in social choice theory[83]
  • Möbius loop roller coasters, a form of dual-tracked roller coaster in which the two tracks spiral around each other an odd number of times, so that the carriages return to the other track than the one they started on[84][85]
  • World maps projected onto a Möbius strip with the convenient properties that there are no east–west boundaries, and that the antipode of any point on the map can be found on the other printed side of the surface at the same point of the Möbius strip[86][87]

Scientists have also studied the energetics of soap films shaped as Möbius strips,[88][89] the chemical synthesis of molecules with a Möbius strip shape,[90][91] and the formation of larger nanoscale Möbius strips using DNA origami.[92]

In popular culture edit

 
Endless Twist, Max Bill, 1956, from the Middelheim Open Air Sculpture Museum

Two-dimensional artworks featuring the Möbius strip include an untitled 1947 painting by Corrado Cagli (memorialized in a poem by Charles Olson),[93][94] and two prints by M. C. Escher: Möbius Band I (1961), depicting three folded flatfish biting each others' tails; and Möbius Band II (1963), depicting ants crawling around a lemniscate-shaped Möbius strip.[95][96] It is also a popular subject of mathematical sculpture, including works by Max Bill (Endless Ribbon, 1953), José de Rivera (Infinity, 1967), and Sebastián.[93] A trefoil-knotted Möbius strip was used in John Robinson's Immortality (1982).[97] Charles O. Perry's Continuum (1976) is one of several pieces by Perry exploring variations of the Möbius strip.[98]

 
Google Drive logo (2012–2014)
 
IMPA logo on stamp

Because of their easily recognized form, Möbius strips are a common element of graphic design.[97] The familiar three-arrow logo for recycling, designed in 1970, is based on the smooth triangular form of the Möbius strip,[99] as was the logo for the environmentally-themed Expo '74.[100] Some variations of the recycling symbol use a different embedding with three half-twists instead of one,[99] and the original version of the Google Drive logo used a flat-folded three-twist Möbius strip, as have other similar designs.[101] The Brazilian Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (IMPA) uses a stylized smooth Möbius strip as their logo, and has a matching large sculpture of a Möbius strip on display in their building.[102] The Möbius strip has also featured in the artwork for postage stamps from countries including Brazil, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Switzerland.[103][104]

 
NASCAR Hall of Fame entrance

Möbius strips have been a frequent inspiration for the architectural design of buildings and bridges. However, many of these are projects or conceptual designs rather than constructed objects, or stretch their interpretation of the Möbius strip beyond its recognizability as a mathematical form or a functional part of the architecture.[105][106] An example is the National Library of Kazakhstan, for which a building was planned in the shape of a thickened Möbius strip but refinished with a different design after the original architects pulled out of the project.[107] One notable building incorporating a Möbius strip is the NASCAR Hall of Fame, which is surrounded by a large twisted ribbon of stainless steel acting as a façade and canopy, and evoking the curved shapes of racing tracks.[108] On a smaller scale, Moebius Chair (2006) by Pedro Reyes is a courting bench whose base and sides have the form of a Möbius strip.[109] As a form of mathematics and fiber arts, scarves have been knit into Möbius strips since the work of Elizabeth Zimmermann in the early 1980s.[110] In food styling, Möbius strips have been used for slicing bagels,[111] making loops out of bacon,[112] and creating new shapes for pasta.[113]

Although mathematically the Möbius strip and the fourth dimension are both purely spatial concepts, they have often been invoked in speculative fiction as the basis for a time loop into which unwary victims may become trapped. Examples of this trope include Martin Gardner's "No-Sided Professor" (1946), Armin Joseph Deutsch's "A Subway Named Mobius" (1950) and the film Moebius (1996) based on it. An entire world shaped like a Möbius strip is the setting of Arthur C. Clarke's "The Wall of Darkness" (1946), while conventional Möbius strips are used as clever inventions in multiple stories of William Hazlett Upson from the 1940s.[114] Other works of fiction have been analyzed as having a Möbius strip–like structure, in which elements of the plot repeat with a twist; these include Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time (1913–1927), Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author (1921), Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life (1946), John Barth's Lost in the Funhouse (1968), Samuel R. Delany's Dhalgren (1975) and the film Donnie Darko (2001).[115]

One of the musical canons by J. S. Bach, the fifth of 14 canons (BWV 1087) discovered in 1974 in Bach's copy of the Goldberg Variations, features a glide-reflect symmetry in which each voice in the canon repeats, with inverted notes, the same motif from two measures earlier. Because of this symmetry, this canon can be thought of as having its score written on a Möbius strip.[116][h] In music theory, tones that differ by an octave are generally considered to be equivalent notes, and the space of possible notes forms a circle, the chromatic circle. Because the Möbius strip is the configuration space of two unordered points on a circle, the space of all two-note chords takes the shape of a Möbius strip. This conception, and generalizations to more points, is a significant application of orbifolds to music theory.[117][118] Modern musical groups taking their name from the Möbius strip include American electronic rock trio Mobius Band[119] and Norwegian progressive rock band Ring Van Möbius.[120]

Möbius strips and their properties have been used in the design of stage magic. One such trick, known as the Afghan bands, uses the fact that the Möbius strip remains a single strip when cut lengthwise. It originated in the 1880s, and was very popular in the first half of the twentieth century. Many versions of this trick exist and have been performed by famous illusionists such as Harry Blackstone Sr. and Thomas Nelson Downs.[121][122]

See also edit

  • Möbius counter, a shift register whose output bit is complemented before being fed back into the input bit
  • Penrose triangle, an impossible figure whose boundary appears to wrap around it in a Möbius strip
  • Ribbon theory, the mathematical theory of infinitesimally thin strips that follow knotted space curves
  • Smale–Williams attractor, a fractal formed by repeatedly thickening a space curve to a Möbius strip and then replacing it with the boundary edge
  • Umbilic torus

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pronounced US: /ˈmbiəs, ˈm-/ MOH-bee-əs, MAY-, UK: /ˈmɜːbiəs/;[1] German: [ˈmøːbi̯ʊs]. As is common for words containing an umlaut, it is also often spelled Mobius or Moebius.
  2. ^ Essentially this example, but for a Klein bottle rather than a Möbius strip, is given by Blackett (1982).[8]
  3. ^ The length of a strip can be measured at its centerline, or by cutting the resulting Möbius strip perpendicularly to its boundary so that it forms a rectangle
  4. ^ The flat-folded Möbius strip formed from three equilateral triangles does not come from an abstract simplicial complex, because all three triangles share the same three vertices, while abstract simplicial complexes require each triangle to have a different set of vertices.
  5. ^ This piecewise planar and cylindrical embedding has smoothness class  , and can be approximated arbitrarily accurately by infinitely differentiable (class  ) embeddings.[39]
  6. ^ 12/7 is the simplest rational number in the range of aspect ratios, between 1.695 and 1.73, for which the existence of a smooth embedding is unknown.
  7. ^ These surfaces have smoothness class  . For a more fine-grained analysis of the smoothness assumptions that force an embedding to be developable versus the assumptions under which the Nash–Kuiper theorem allows arbitrarily flexible embeddings, see remarks by Bartels & Hornung (2015), p. 116, following Theorem 2.2.[39]
  8. ^ Möbius strips have also been used to analyze many other canons by Bach and others, but in most of these cases other looping surfaces such as a cylinder could have been used equally well.[116]

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External links edit

möbius, strip, mathematics, möbius, band, möbius, loop, surface, that, formed, attaching, ends, strip, paper, together, with, half, twist, mathematical, object, discovered, johann, benedict, listing, august, ferdinand, möbius, 1858, already, appeared, roman, m. In mathematics a Mobius strip Mobius band or Mobius loop a is a surface that can be formed by attaching the ends of a strip of paper together with a half twist As a mathematical object it was discovered by Johann Benedict Listing and August Ferdinand Mobius in 1858 but it had already appeared in Roman mosaics from the third century CE The Mobius strip is a non orientable surface meaning that within it one cannot consistently distinguish clockwise from counterclockwise turns Every non orientable surface contains a Mobius strip A Mobius strip made with paper and adhesive tape As an abstract topological space the Mobius strip can be embedded into three dimensional Euclidean space in many different ways a clockwise half twist is different from a counterclockwise half twist and it can also be embedded with odd numbers of twists greater than one or with a knotted centerline Any two embeddings with the same knot for the centerline and the same number and direction of twists are topologically equivalent All of these embeddings have only one side but when embedded in other spaces the Mobius strip may have two sides It has only a single boundary curve Several geometric constructions of the Mobius strip provide it with additional structure It can be swept as a ruled surface by a line segment rotating in a rotating plane with or without self crossings A thin paper strip with its ends joined to form a Mobius strip can bend smoothly as a developable surface or be folded flat the flattened Mobius strips include the trihexaflexagon The Sudanese Mobius strip is a minimal surface in a hypersphere and the Meeks Mobius strip is a self intersecting minimal surface in ordinary Euclidean space Both the Sudanese Mobius strip and another self intersecting Mobius strip the cross cap have a circular boundary A Mobius strip without its boundary called an open Mobius strip can form surfaces of constant curvature Certain highly symmetric spaces whose points represent lines in the plane have the shape of a Mobius strip The many applications of Mobius strips include mechanical belts that wear evenly on both sides dual track roller coasters whose carriages alternate between the two tracks and world maps printed so that antipodes appear opposite each other Mobius strips appear in molecules and devices with novel electrical and electromechanical properties and have been used to prove impossibility results in social choice theory In popular culture Mobius strips appear in artworks by M C Escher Max Bill and others and in the design of the recycling symbol Many architectural concepts have been inspired by the Mobius strip including the building design for the NASCAR Hall of Fame Performers including Harry Blackstone Sr and Thomas Nelson Downs have based stage magic tricks on the properties of the Mobius strip The canons of J S Bach have been analyzed using Mobius strips Many works of speculative fiction feature Mobius strips more generally a plot structure based on the Mobius strip of events that repeat with a twist is common in fiction Contents 1 History 2 Properties 3 Constructions 3 1 Sweeping a line segment 3 2 Polyhedral surfaces and flat foldings 3 3 Smoothly embedded rectangles 3 4 Making the boundary circular 3 5 Surfaces of constant curvature 3 6 Spaces of lines 4 Applications 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Mosaic from ancient Sentinum depicting Aion holding a Mobius strip nbsp Chain pump with a Mobius drive chain by Ismail al Jazari 1206 The discovery of the Mobius strip as a mathematical object is attributed independently to the German mathematicians Johann Benedict Listing and August Ferdinand Mobius in 1858 2 However it had been known long before both as a physical object and in artistic depictions in particular it can be seen in several Roman mosaics from the third century CE 3 4 In many cases these merely depict coiled ribbons as boundaries When the number of coils is odd these ribbons are Mobius strips but for an even number of coils they are topologically equivalent to untwisted rings Therefore whether the ribbon is a Mobius strip may be coincidental rather than a deliberate choice In at least one case a ribbon with different colors on different sides was drawn with an odd number of coils forcing its artist to make a clumsy fix at the point where the colors did not match up 3 Another mosaic from the town of Sentinum depicted shows the zodiac held by the god Aion as a band with only a single twist There is no clear evidence that the one sidedness of this visual representation of celestial time was intentional it could have been chosen merely as a way to make all of the signs of the zodiac appear on the visible side of the strip Some other ancient depictions of the ourobouros or of figure eight shaped decorations are also alleged to depict Mobius strips but whether they were intended to depict flat strips of any type is unclear 4 Independently of the mathematical tradition machinists have long known that mechanical belts wear half as quickly when they form Mobius strips because they use the entire surface of the belt rather than only the inner surface of an untwisted belt 3 Additionally such a belt may be less prone to curling from side to side An early written description of this technique dates to 1871 which is after the first mathematical publications regarding the Mobius strip Much earlier an image of a chain pump in a work of Ismail al Jazari from 1206 depicts a Mobius strip configuration for its drive chain 4 Another use of this surface was made by seamstresses in Paris at an unspecified date they initiated novices by requiring them to stitch a Mobius strip as a collar onto a garment 3 Properties edit nbsp A 2D object traversing once around the Mobius strip returns in mirrored form The Mobius strip has several curious properties It is a non orientable surface if an asymmetric two dimensional object slides one time around the strip it returns to its starting position as its mirror image In particular a curved arrow pointing clockwise would return as an arrow pointing counterclockwise implying that within the Mobius strip it is impossible to consistently define what it means to be clockwise or counterclockwise It is the simplest non orientable surface any other surface is non orientable if and only if it has a Mobius strip as a subset 5 Relatedly when embedded into Euclidean space the Mobius strip has only one side A three dimensional object that slides one time around the surface of the strip is not mirrored but instead returns to the same point of the strip on what appears locally to be its other side showing that both positions are really part of a single side This behavior is different from familiar orientable surfaces in three dimensions such as those modeled by flat sheets of paper cylindrical drinking straws or hollow balls for which one side of the surface is not connected to the other 6 However this is a property of its embedding into space rather than an intrinsic property of the Mobius strip itself there exist other topological spaces in which the Mobius strip can be embedded so that it has two sides 7 For instance if the front and back faces of a cube are glued to each other with a left right mirror reflection the result is a three dimensional topological space the Cartesian product of a Mobius strip with an interval in which the top and bottom halves of the cube can be separated from each other by a two sided Mobius strip b In contrast to disks spheres and cylinders for which it is possible to simultaneously embed an uncountable set of disjoint copies into three dimensional space only a countable number of Mobius strips can be simultaneously embedded 9 10 11 A path along the edge of a Mobius strip traced until it returns to its starting point on the edge includes all boundary points of the Mobius strip in a single continuous curve For a Mobius strip formed by gluing and twisting a rectangle it has twice the length of the centerline of the strip In this sense the Mobius strip is different from an untwisted ring and like a circular disk in having only one boundary 6 A Mobius strip in Euclidean space cannot be moved or stretched into its mirror image it is a chiral object with right or left handedness 12 Mobius strips with odd numbers of half twists greater than one or that are knotted before gluing are distinct as embedded subsets of three dimensional space even though they are all equivalent as two dimensional topological surfaces 13 More precisely two Mobius strips are equivalently embedded in three dimensional space when their centerlines determine the same knot and they have the same number of twists as each other 14 With an even number of twists however one obtains a different topological surface called the annulus 15 The Mobius strip can be continuously transformed into its centerline by making it narrower while fixing the points on the centerline This transformation is an example of a deformation retraction and its existence means that the Mobius strip has many of the same properties as its centerline which is topologically a circle In particular its fundamental group is the same as the fundamental group of a circle an infinite cyclic group Therefore paths on the Mobius strip that start and end at the same point can be distinguished topologically up to homotopy only by the number of times they loop around the strip 16 nbsp Cutting the centerline produces a double length two sided non Mobius strip nbsp A single off center cut produces a Mobius strip purple linked with a double length two sided strip Cutting a Mobius strip along the centerline with a pair of scissors yields one long strip with four half twists in it relative to an untwisted annulus or cylinder rather than two separate strips Two of the half twists come from the fact that this thinner strip goes two times through the half twist in the original Mobius strip and the other two come from the way the two halves of the thinner strip wrap around each other The result is not a Mobius strip but instead is topologically equivalent to a cylinder Cutting this double twisted strip again along its centerline produces two linked double twisted strips If instead a Mobius strip is cut lengthwise a third of the way across its width it produces two linked strips One of the two is a central thinner Mobius strip while the other has two half twists 6 These interlinked shapes formed by lengthwise slices of Mobius strips with varying widths are sometimes called paradromic rings 17 18 nbsp Subdivision into six mutually adjacent regions bounded by Tietze s graph nbsp Solution to the three utilities problem on a Mobius strip The Mobius strip can be cut into six mutually adjacent regions showing that maps on the surface of the Mobius strip can sometimes require six colors in contrast to the four color theorem for the plane 19 Six colors are always enough This result is part of the Ringel Youngs theorem which states how many colors each topological surface needs 20 The edges and vertices of these six regions form Tietze s graph which is a dual graph on this surface for the six vertex complete graph but cannot be drawn without crossings on a plane Another family of graphs that can be embedded on the Mobius strip but not on the plane are the Mobius ladders the boundaries of subdivisions of the Mobius strip into rectangles meeting end to end 21 These include the utility graph a six vertex complete bipartite graph whose embedding into the Mobius strip shows that unlike in the plane the three utilities problem can be solved on a transparent Mobius strip 22 The Euler characteristic of the Mobius strip is zero meaning that for any subdivision of the strip by vertices and edges into regions the numbers V displaystyle V nbsp E displaystyle E nbsp and F displaystyle F nbsp of vertices edges and regions satisfy V E F 0 displaystyle V E F 0 nbsp For instance Tietze s graph has 12 displaystyle 12 nbsp vertices 18 displaystyle 18 nbsp edges and 6 displaystyle 6 nbsp regions 12 18 6 0 displaystyle 12 18 6 0 nbsp 19 Constructions editThere are many different ways of defining geometric surfaces with the topology of the Mobius strip yielding realizations with additional geometric properties Sweeping a line segment edit nbsp A Mobius strip swept out by a rotating line segment in a rotating plane nbsp Plucker s conoid swept out by a different motion of a line segment One way to embed the Mobius strip in three dimensional Euclidean space is to sweep it out by a line segment rotating in a plane which in turn rotates around one of its lines 23 For the swept surface to meet up with itself after a half twist the line segment should rotate around its center at half the angular velocity of the plane s rotation This can be described as a parametric surface defined by equations for the Cartesian coordinates of its points x u v 1 v 2 cos u 2 cos u y u v 1 v 2 cos u 2 sin u z u v v 2 sin u 2 displaystyle begin aligned x u v amp left 1 frac v 2 cos frac u 2 right cos u y u v amp left 1 frac v 2 cos frac u 2 right sin u z u v amp frac v 2 sin frac u 2 end aligned nbsp for 0 u lt 2 p displaystyle 0 leq u lt 2 pi nbsp and 1 v 1 displaystyle 1 leq v leq 1 nbsp where one parameter u displaystyle u nbsp describes the rotation angle of the plane around its central axis and the other parameter v displaystyle v nbsp describes the position of a point along the rotating line segment This produces a Mobius strip of width 1 whose center circle has radius 1 lies in the x y displaystyle xy nbsp plane and is centered at 0 0 0 displaystyle 0 0 0 nbsp 24 The same method can produce Mobius strips with any odd number of half twists by rotating the segment more quickly in its plane The rotating segment sweeps out a circular disk in the plane that it rotates within and the Mobius strip that it generates forms a slice through the solid torus swept out by this disk Because of the one sidedness of this slice the sliced torus remains connected 25 A line or line segment swept in a different motion rotating in a horizontal plane around the origin as it moves up and down forms Plucker s conoid or cylindroid an algebraic ruled surface in the form of a self crossing Mobius strip 26 It has applications in the design of gears 27 Polyhedral surfaces and flat foldings edit nbsp Trihexaflexagon being flexed A strip of paper can form a flattened Mobius strip in the plane by folding it at 60 displaystyle 60 circ nbsp angles so that its center line lies along an equilateral triangle and attaching the ends The shortest strip for which this is possible consists of three equilateral triangles folded at the edges where two triangles meet Its aspect ratio the ratio of the strip s length c to its width is 3 1 73 displaystyle sqrt 3 approx 1 73 nbsp and the same folding method works for any larger aspect ratio 28 29 For a strip of nine equilateral triangles the result is a trihexaflexagon which can be flexed to reveal different parts of its surface 30 For strips too short to apply this method directly one can first accordion fold the strip in its wide direction back and forth using an even number of folds With two folds for example a 1 1 displaystyle 1 times 1 nbsp strip would become a 1 1 3 displaystyle 1 times tfrac 1 3 nbsp folded strip whose cross section is in the shape of an N and would remain an N after a half twist The narrower accordion folded strip can then be folded and joined in the same way that a longer strip would be 28 29 nbsp nbsp Five vertex polyhedral and flat folded Mobius strips The Mobius strip can also be embedded as a polyhedral surface in space or flat folded in the plane with only five triangular faces sharing five vertices In this sense it is simpler than the cylinder which requires six triangles and six vertices even when represented more abstractly as a simplicial complex 31 d A five triangle Mobius strip can be represented most symmetrically by five of the ten equilateral triangles of a four dimensional regular simplex This four dimensional polyhedral Mobius strip is the only tight Mobius strip one that is fully four dimensional and for which all cuts by hyperplanes separate it into two parts that are topologically equivalent to disks or circles 32 Other polyhedral embeddings of Mobius strips include one with four convex quadrilaterals as faces another with three non convex quadrilateral faces 33 and one using the vertices and center point of a regular octahedron with a triangular boundary 34 Every abstract triangulation of the projective plane can be embedded into 3D as a polyhedral Mobius strip with a triangular boundary after removing one of its faces 35 an example is the six vertex projective plane obtained by adding one vertex to the five vertex Mobius strip connected by triangles to each of its boundary edges 31 However not every abstract triangulation of the Mobius strip can be represented geometrically as a polyhedral surface 36 To be realizable it is necessary and sufficient that there be no two disjoint non contractible 3 cycles in the triangulation 37 Smoothly embedded rectangles edit A rectangular Mobius strip made by attaching the ends of a paper rectangle can be embedded smoothly into three dimensional space whenever its aspect ratio is greater than 3 1 73 displaystyle sqrt 3 approx 1 73 nbsp the same ratio as for the flat folded equilateral triangle version of the Mobius strip 38 This flat triangular embedding can lift to a smooth e embedding in three dimensions in which the strip lies flat in three parallel planes between three cylindrical rollers each tangent to two of the planes 38 Mathematically a smoothly embedded sheet of paper can be modeled as a developable surface that can bend but cannot stretch 39 40 As its aspect ratio decreases toward 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp all smooth embeddings seem to approach the same triangular form 41 The lengthwise folds of an accordion folded flat Mobius strip prevent it from forming a three dimensional embedding in which the layers are separated from each other and bend smoothly without crumpling or stretching away from the folds 29 Instead unlike in the flat folded case there is a lower limit to the aspect ratio of smooth rectangular Mobius strips Their aspect ratio cannot be less than p 2 1 57 displaystyle pi 2 approx 1 57 nbsp even if self intersections are allowed Self intersecting smooth Mobius strips exist for any aspect ratio above this bound 29 42 Without self intersections the aspect ratio must be at least 43 2 3 3 2 3 1 695 displaystyle frac 2 3 sqrt 3 2 sqrt 3 approx 1 695 nbsp Unsolved problem in mathematics Can a 12 7 displaystyle 12 times 7 nbsp paper rectangle be glued end to end to form a smooth Mobius strip embedded in space f more unsolved problems in mathematics For aspect ratios between this bound and 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp it has been an open problem whether smooth embeddings without self intersection exist 29 42 43 In 2023 Richard Schwartz announced a proof that they do not exist but this result still awaits peer review and publication 44 45 If the requirement of smoothness is relaxed to allow continuously differentiable surfaces the Nash Kuiper theorem implies that any two opposite edges of any rectangle can be glued to form an embedded Mobius strip no matter how small the aspect ratio becomes g The limiting case a surface obtained from an infinite strip of the plane between two parallel lines glued with the opposite orientation to each other is called the unbounded Mobius strip or the real tautological line bundle 46 Although it has no smooth closed embedding into three dimensional space it can be embedded smoothly as a closed subset of four dimensional Euclidean space 47 The minimum energy shape of a smooth Mobius strip glued from a rectangle does not have a known analytic description but can be calculated numerically and has been the subject of much study in plate theory since the initial work on this subject in 1930 by Michael Sadowsky 39 40 It is also possible to find algebraic surfaces that contain rectangular developable Mobius strips 48 49 Making the boundary circular edit nbsp Gluing two Mobius strips to form a Klein bottle nbsp A projection of the Sudanese Mobius strip The edge or boundary of a Mobius strip is topologically equivalent to a circle In common forms of the Mobius strip it has a different shape from a circle but it is unknotted and therefore the whole strip can be stretched without crossing itself to make the edge perfectly circular 50 One such example is based on the topology of the Klein bottle a one sided surface with no boundary that cannot be embedded into three dimensional space but can be immersed allowing the surface to cross itself in certain restricted ways A Klein bottle is the surface that results when two Mobius strips are glued together edge to edge and reversing that process a Klein bottle can be sliced along a carefully chosen cut to produce two Mobius strips 51 For a form of the Klein bottle known as Lawson s Klein bottle the curve along which it is sliced can be made circular resulting in Mobius strips with circular edges 52 Lawson s Klein bottle is a self crossing minimal surface in the unit hypersphere of 4 dimensional space the set of points of the form cos 8 cos ϕ sin 8 cos ϕ cos 2 8 sin ϕ sin 2 8 sin ϕ displaystyle cos theta cos phi sin theta cos phi cos 2 theta sin phi sin 2 theta sin phi nbsp for 0 8 lt p 0 ϕ lt 2 p displaystyle 0 leq theta lt pi 0 leq phi lt 2 pi nbsp 53 Half of this Klein bottle the subset with 0 ϕ lt p displaystyle 0 leq phi lt pi nbsp gives a Mobius strip embedded in the hypersphere as a minimal surface with a great circle as its boundary 54 This embedding is sometimes called the Sudanese Mobius strip after topologists Sue Goodman and Daniel Asimov who discovered it in the 1970s 55 Geometrically Lawson s Klein bottle can be constructed by sweeping a great circle through a great circular motion in the 3 sphere and the Sudanese Mobius strip is obtained by sweeping a semicircle instead of a circle or equivalently by slicing the Klein bottle along a circle that is perpendicular to all of the swept circles 52 56 Stereographic projection transforms this shape from a three dimensional spherical space into three dimensional Euclidean space preserving the circularity of its boundary 52 The most symmetric projection is obtained by using a projection point that lies on that great circle that runs through the midpoint of each of the semicircles but produces an unbounded embedding with the projection point removed from its centerline 54 Instead leaving the Sudanese Mobius strip unprojected in the 3 sphere leaves it with an infinite group of symmetries isomorphic to the orthogonal group O 2 displaystyle mathrm O 2 nbsp the group of symmetries of a circle 53 nbsp Schematic depiction of a cross cap with an open bottom showing its level sets This surface crosses itself along the vertical line segment The Sudanese Mobius strip extends on all sides of its boundary circle unavoidably if the surface is to avoid crossing itself Another form of the Mobius strip called the cross cap or crosscap also has a circular boundary but otherwise stays on only one side of the plane of this circle 57 making it more convenient for attaching onto circular holes in other surfaces In order to do so it crosses itself It can be formed by removing a quadrilateral from the top of a hemisphere orienting the edges of the quadrilateral in alternating directions and then gluing opposite pairs of these edges consistently with this orientation 58 The two parts of the surface formed by the two glued pairs of edges cross each other with a pinch point like that of a Whitney umbrella at each end of the crossing segment 59 the same topological structure seen in Plucker s conoid 26 Surfaces of constant curvature edit The open Mobius strip is the relative interior of a standard Mobius strip formed by omitting the points on its boundary edge It may be given a Riemannian geometry of constant positive negative or zero Gaussian curvature The cases of negative and zero curvature form geodesically complete surfaces which means that all geodesics straight lines on the surface may be extended indefinitely in either direction Zero curvature An open strip with zero curvature may be constructed by gluing the opposite sides of a plane strip between two parallel lines described above as the tautological line bundle 46 The resulting metric makes the open Mobius strip into a geodesically complete flat surface i e having zero Gaussian curvature everywhere This is the unique metric on the Mobius strip up to uniform scaling that is both flat and complete It is the quotient space of a plane by a glide reflection and together with the plane cylinder torus and Klein bottle is one of only five two dimensional complete flat manifolds 60 Negative curvature The open Mobius strip also admits complete metrics of constant negative curvature One way to see this is to begin with the upper half plane Poincare model of the hyperbolic plane a geometry of constant curvature whose lines are represented in the model by semicircles that meet the x displaystyle x nbsp axis at right angles Take the subset of the upper half plane between any two nested semicircles and identify the outer semicircle with the left right reversal of the inner semicircle The result is topologically a complete and non compact Mobius strip with constant negative curvature It is a nonstandard complete hyperbolic surface in the sense that it contains a complete hyperbolic half plane actually two on opposite sides of the axis of glide reflection and is one of only 13 nonstandard surfaces 61 Again this can be understood as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by a glide reflection 62 Positive curvature A Mobius strip of constant positive curvature cannot be complete since it is known that the only complete surfaces of constant positive curvature are the sphere and the projective plane 60 However in a sense it is only one point away from being a complete surface as the open Mobius strip is homeomorphic to the once punctured projective plane the surface obtained by removing any one point from the projective plane 63 The minimal surfaces are described as having constant zero mean curvature instead of constant Gaussian curvature The Sudanese Mobius strip was constructed as a minimal surface bounded by a great circle in a 3 sphere but there is also a unique complete boundaryless minimal surface immersed in Euclidean space that has the topology of an open Mobius strip It is called the Meeks Mobius strip 64 after its 1982 description by William Hamilton Meeks III 65 Although globally unstable as a minimal surface small patches of it bounded by non contractible curves within the surface can form stable embedded Mobius strips as minimal surfaces 66 Both the Meeks Mobius strip and every higher dimensional minimal surface with the topology of the Mobius strip can be constructed using solutions to the Bjorling problem which defines a minimal surface uniquely from its boundary curve and tangent planes along this curve 67 Spaces of lines edit The family of lines in the plane can be given the structure of a smooth space with each line represented as a point in this space The resulting space of lines is topologically equivalent to the open Mobius strip 68 One way to see this is to extend the Euclidean plane to the real projective plane by adding one more line the line at infinity By projective duality the space of lines in the projective plane is equivalent to its space of points the projective plane itself Removing the line at infinity to produce the space of Euclidean lines punctures this space of projective lines 69 Therefore the space of Euclidean lines is a punctured projective plane which is one of the forms of the open Mobius strip 63 The space of lines in the hyperbolic plane can be parameterized by unordered pairs of distinct points on a circle the pairs of points at infinity of each line This space again has the topology of an open Mobius strip 70 These spaces of lines are highly symmetric The symmetries of Euclidean lines include the affine transformations and the symmetries of hyperbolic lines include the Mobius transformations 71 The affine transformations and Mobius transformations both form 6 dimensional Lie groups topological spaces having a compatible algebraic structure describing the composition of symmetries 72 73 Because every line in the plane is symmetric to every other line the open Mobius strip is a homogeneous space a space with symmetries that take every point to every other point Homogeneous spaces of Lie groups are called solvmanifolds and the Mobius strip can be used as a counterexample showing that not every solvmanifold is a nilmanifold and that not every solvmanifold can be factored into a direct product of a compact solvmanifold with R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp These symmetries also provide another way to construct the Mobius strip itself as a group model of these Lie groups A group model consists of a Lie group and a stabilizer subgroup of its action contracting the cosets of the subgroup to points produces a space with the same topology as the underlying homogenous space In the case of the symmetries of Euclidean lines the stabilizer of the x displaystyle x nbsp axis consists of all symmetries that take the axis to itself Each line ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp corresponds to a coset the set of symmetries that map ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp to the x displaystyle x nbsp axis Therefore the quotient space a space that has one point per coset and inherits its topology from the space of symmetries is the same as the space of lines and is again an open Mobius strip 74 Applications edit nbsp Electrical flow in a Mobius resistor Beyond the already discussed applications of Mobius strips to the design of mechanical belts that wear evenly on their entire surface and of the Plucker conoid to the design of gears other applications of Mobius strips include Graphene ribbons twisted to form Mobius strips with new electronic characteristics including helical magnetism 75 Mobius aromaticity a property of organic chemicals whose molecular structure forms a cycle with molecular orbitals aligned along the cycle in the pattern of a Mobius strip 76 77 The Mobius resistor a strip of conductive material covering the single side of a dielectric Mobius strip in a way that cancels its own self inductance 78 79 Resonators with a compact design and a resonant frequency that is half that of identically constructed linear coils 80 81 Polarization patterns in light emerging from a q plate 82 A proof of the impossibility of continuous anonymous and unanimous two party aggregation rules in social choice theory 83 Mobius loop roller coasters a form of dual tracked roller coaster in which the two tracks spiral around each other an odd number of times so that the carriages return to the other track than the one they started on 84 85 World maps projected onto a Mobius strip with the convenient properties that there are no east west boundaries and that the antipode of any point on the map can be found on the other printed side of the surface at the same point of the Mobius strip 86 87 Scientists have also studied the energetics of soap films shaped as Mobius strips 88 89 the chemical synthesis of molecules with a Mobius strip shape 90 91 and the formation of larger nanoscale Mobius strips using DNA origami 92 In popular culture edit nbsp Endless Twist Max Bill 1956 from the Middelheim Open Air Sculpture Museum Two dimensional artworks featuring the Mobius strip include an untitled 1947 painting by Corrado Cagli memorialized in a poem by Charles Olson 93 94 and two prints by M C Escher Mobius Band I 1961 depicting three folded flatfish biting each others tails and Mobius Band II 1963 depicting ants crawling around a lemniscate shaped Mobius strip 95 96 It is also a popular subject of mathematical sculpture including works by Max Bill Endless Ribbon 1953 Jose de Rivera Infinity 1967 and Sebastian 93 A trefoil knotted Mobius strip was used in John Robinson s Immortality 1982 97 Charles O Perry s Continuum 1976 is one of several pieces by Perry exploring variations of the Mobius strip 98 nbsp Recycling symbol nbsp Google Drive logo 2012 2014 nbsp IMPA logo on stamp Because of their easily recognized form Mobius strips are a common element of graphic design 97 The familiar three arrow logo for recycling designed in 1970 is based on the smooth triangular form of the Mobius strip 99 as was the logo for the environmentally themed Expo 74 100 Some variations of the recycling symbol use a different embedding with three half twists instead of one 99 and the original version of the Google Drive logo used a flat folded three twist Mobius strip as have other similar designs 101 The Brazilian Instituto Nacional de Matematica Pura e Aplicada IMPA uses a stylized smooth Mobius strip as their logo and has a matching large sculpture of a Mobius strip on display in their building 102 The Mobius strip has also featured in the artwork for postage stamps from countries including Brazil Belgium the Netherlands and Switzerland 103 104 nbsp NASCAR Hall of Fame entrance Mobius strips have been a frequent inspiration for the architectural design of buildings and bridges However many of these are projects or conceptual designs rather than constructed objects or stretch their interpretation of the Mobius strip beyond its recognizability as a mathematical form or a functional part of the architecture 105 106 An example is the National Library of Kazakhstan for which a building was planned in the shape of a thickened Mobius strip but refinished with a different design after the original architects pulled out of the project 107 One notable building incorporating a Mobius strip is the NASCAR Hall of Fame which is surrounded by a large twisted ribbon of stainless steel acting as a facade and canopy and evoking the curved shapes of racing tracks 108 On a smaller scale Moebius Chair 2006 by Pedro Reyes is a courting bench whose base and sides have the form of a Mobius strip 109 As a form of mathematics and fiber arts scarves have been knit into Mobius strips since the work of Elizabeth Zimmermann in the early 1980s 110 In food styling Mobius strips have been used for slicing bagels 111 making loops out of bacon 112 and creating new shapes for pasta 113 Although mathematically the Mobius strip and the fourth dimension are both purely spatial concepts they have often been invoked in speculative fiction as the basis for a time loop into which unwary victims may become trapped Examples of this trope include Martin Gardner s No Sided Professor 1946 Armin Joseph Deutsch s A Subway Named Mobius 1950 and the film Moebius 1996 based on it An entire world shaped like a Mobius strip is the setting of Arthur C Clarke s The Wall of Darkness 1946 while conventional Mobius strips are used as clever inventions in multiple stories of William Hazlett Upson from the 1940s 114 Other works of fiction have been analyzed as having a Mobius strip like structure in which elements of the plot repeat with a twist these include Marcel Proust s In Search of Lost Time 1913 1927 Luigi Pirandello s Six Characters in Search of an Author 1921 Frank Capra s It s a Wonderful Life 1946 John Barth s Lost in the Funhouse 1968 Samuel R Delany s Dhalgren 1975 and the film Donnie Darko 2001 115 One of the musical canons by J S Bach the fifth of 14 canons BWV 1087 discovered in 1974 in Bach s copy of the Goldberg Variations features a glide reflect symmetry in which each voice in the canon repeats with inverted notes the same motif from two measures earlier Because of this symmetry this canon can be thought of as having its score written on a Mobius strip 116 h In music theory tones that differ by an octave are generally considered to be equivalent notes and the space of possible notes forms a circle the chromatic circle Because the Mobius strip is the configuration space of two unordered points on a circle the space of all two note chords takes the shape of a Mobius strip This conception and generalizations to more points is a significant application of orbifolds to music theory 117 118 Modern musical groups taking their name from the Mobius strip include American electronic rock trio Mobius Band 119 and Norwegian progressive rock band Ring Van Mobius 120 Mobius strips and their properties have been used in the design of stage magic One such trick known as the Afghan bands uses the fact that the Mobius strip remains a single strip when cut lengthwise It originated in the 1880s and was very popular in the first half of the twentieth century Many versions of this trick exist and have been performed by famous illusionists such as Harry Blackstone Sr and Thomas Nelson Downs 121 122 See also editMobius counter a shift register whose output bit is complemented before being fed back into the input bit Penrose triangle an impossible figure whose boundary appears to wrap around it in a Mobius strip Ribbon theory the mathematical theory of infinitesimally thin strips that follow knotted space curves Smale Williams attractor a fractal formed by repeatedly thickening a space curve to a Mobius strip and then replacing it with the boundary edge Umbilic torusNotes edit Pronounced US ˈ m oʊ b i e s ˈ m eɪ MOH bee es MAY UK ˈ m ɜː b i e s 1 German ˈmoːbi ʊs As is common for words containing an umlaut it is also often spelled Mobius or Moebius Essentially this example but for a Klein bottle rather than a Mobius strip is given by Blackett 1982 8 The length of a strip can be measured at its centerline or by cutting the resulting Mobius strip perpendicularly to its boundary so that it forms a rectangle The flat folded Mobius strip formed from three equilateral triangles does not come from an abstract simplicial complex because all three triangles share the same three vertices while abstract simplicial complexes require each triangle to have a different set of vertices This piecewise planar and cylindrical embedding has smoothness class C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp and can be approximated arbitrarily accurately by infinitely differentiable class C displaystyle C infty nbsp embeddings 39 12 7 is the simplest rational number in the range of aspect ratios between 1 695 and 1 73 for which the existence of a smooth embedding is unknown These surfaces have smoothness class C 1 displaystyle C 1 nbsp For a more fine grained analysis of the smoothness assumptions that force an embedding to be developable versus the assumptions under which the Nash Kuiper theorem allows arbitrarily flexible embeddings see remarks by Bartels amp Hornung 2015 p 116 following Theorem 2 2 39 Mobius strips have also been used to analyze many other canons by Bach and others but in most of these cases other looping surfaces such as a cylinder could have been used equally well 116 References edit Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Pickover Clifford A 2005 The Mobius Strip Dr August Mobius s Marvelous Band in Mathematics Games Literature Art Technology and Cosmology Thunder s Mouth Press pp 28 29 ISBN 978 1 56025 826 1 a b c d Larison Lorraine L 1973 The Mobius band in Roman mosaics American Scientist 61 5 544 547 Bibcode 1973AmSci 61 544L JSTOR 27843983 a b c Cartwright Julyan H E Gonzalez Diego L 2016 Mobius strips before Mobius topological hints in ancient representations The Mathematical Intelligencer 38 2 69 76 arXiv 1609 07779 Bibcode 2016arXiv160907779C doi 10 1007 s00283 016 9631 8 MR 3507121 S2CID 119587191 Flapan Erica 2000 When Topology Meets Chemistry A Topological Look at Molecular Chirality Outlooks Washington DC Mathematical Association 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119782792 Reprinted in Fosdick amp Fried 2016 pp 113 136 See in particular Section 5 2 pp 129 130 a b Starostin E L van der Heijden G H M 2015 Equilibrium shapes with stress localisation for inextensible elastic Mobius and other strips Journal of Elasticity 119 1 2 67 112 doi 10 1007 s10659 014 9495 0 MR 3326186 S2CID 53462568 Reprinted in Fosdick amp Fried 2016 pp 67 112 Schwarz Gideon E 1990 The dark side of the Moebius strip The American Mathematical Monthly 97 10 890 897 doi 10 1080 00029890 1990 11995680 JSTOR 2324325 MR 1079975 a b Halpern B Weaver C 1977 Inverting a cylinder through isometric immersions and isometric embeddings Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 230 41 70 doi 10 2307 1997711 JSTOR 1997711 MR 0474388 a b Schwartz Richard Evan 2021 An improved bound on the optimal paper Moebius band Geometriae Dedicata 215 255 267 arXiv 2008 11610 doi 10 1007 s10711 021 00648 5 MR 4330341 S2CID 220279013 Schwartz Richard 2023 The optimal paper Moebius band arXiv 2308 12641 math MG Crowell Rachel September 12 2023 Mathematicians solve 50 year old Mobius strip puzzle Scientific American a b Dundas Bjorn Ian 2018 Example 5 1 3 The unbounded Mobius band A Short Course in Differential Topology Cambridge Mathematical Textbooks Cambridge University Press Cambridge p https books google com books id 7a1eDwAAQBAJ amp pg PA101 doi 10 1017 9781108349130 ISBN 978 1 108 42579 7 MR 3793640 S2CID 125997451 Blanusa Danilo 1954 Le plongement isometrique de la bande de Mobius infiniment large euclidienne dans un espace spherique parabolique ou hyperbolique a quatre dimensions Bulletin International de l Academie Yougoslave des Sciences et des Beaux Arts 12 19 23 MR 0071060 Wunderlich W 1962 Uber ein abwickelbares Mobiusband Monatshefte fur Mathematik 66 3 276 289 doi 10 1007 BF01299052 MR 0143115 S2CID 122215321 Schwarz Gideon 1990 A pretender to the title canonical Moebius strip Pacific Journal of Mathematics 143 1 195 200 doi 10 2140 pjm 1990 143 195 MR 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Instability of a Mobius strip minimal surface and a link with systolic geometry PDF Physical Review Letters 114 12 127801 Bibcode 2015PhRvL 114l7801P doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 114 127801 MR 3447638 PMID 25860771 Mira Pablo 2006 Complete minimal Mobius strips in R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp and the Bjorling problem Journal of Geometry and Physics 56 9 1506 1515 Bibcode 2006JGP 56 1506M doi 10 1016 j geomphys 2005 08 001 MR 2240407 Parker Phillip E 1993 Spaces of geodesics In Del Riego L ed Differential Geometry Workshop on Spaces of Geometry Guanajuato 1992 Aportaciones Mat Notas Investigacion Vol 8 Soc Mat Mexicana Mexico pp 67 79 MR 1304924 Bickel Holger 1999 Duality in stable planes and related closure and kernel operations Journal of Geometry 64 1 2 8 15 doi 10 1007 BF01229209 MR 1675956 S2CID 122209943 Mangahas Johanna July 2017 Office Hour Five The Ping Pong Lemma In Clay Matt Margalit Dan eds Office Hours with a Geometric Group Theorist Princeton University Press pp 85 105 doi 10 1515 9781400885398 ISBN 9781400885398 See in particular Project 7 pp 104 105 Ramirez Galarza Ana Irene Seade Jose 2007 Introduction to Classical Geometries Basel Birkhauser Verlag pp 83 88 157 163 ISBN 978 3 7643 7517 1 MR 2305055 Fomenko Anatolij T Kunii Tosiyasu L 2013 Topological Modeling for Visualization Springer p 269 ISBN 9784431669562 Isham Chris J 1999 Modern Differential Geometry for Physicists World Scientific lecture notes in physics Vol 61 2nd ed World Scientific p 269 ISBN 981 02 3555 0 MR 1698234 Gorbatsevich V V Onishchik A L Vinberg E B 1993 Lie groups and Lie algebras I Foundations of Lie Theory Lie Transformation Groups Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences Vol 20 Springer Verlag Berlin pp 164 166 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 57999 8 ISBN 3 540 18697 2 MR 1306737 Yamashiro Atsushi Shimoi Yukihiro Harigaya Kikuo Wakabayashi Katsunori 2004 Novel electronic states in graphene ribbons competing spin and charge orders Physica E 22 1 3 688 691 arXiv cond mat 0309636 Bibcode 2004PhyE 22 688Y doi 10 1016 j physe 2003 12 100 S2CID 17102453 Rzepa Henry S September 2005 Mobius aromaticity and delocalization Chemical Reviews 105 10 3697 3715 doi 10 1021 cr030092l PMID 16218564 Yoon Zin Seok Osuka Atsuhiro Kim Dongho May 2009 Mobius aromaticity and antiaromaticity in expanded porphyrins Nature Chemistry 1 2 113 122 Bibcode 2009NatCh 1 113Y doi 10 1038 nchem 172 PMID 21378823 Making resistors with math Time Vol 84 no 13 September 25 1964 Pickover 2005 pp 45 46 Pond J M 2000 Mobius dual mode resonators and bandpass filters IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques 48 12 2465 2471 Bibcode 2000ITMTT 48 2465P doi 10 1109 22 898999 Rohde Ulrich L Poddar Ajay Sundararajan D November 2013 Printed resonators Mobius strip theory and applications PDF Microwave Journal 56 11 Bauer Thomas Banzer Peter Karimi Ebrahim Orlov Sergej Rubano Andrea Marrucci Lorenzo Santamato Enrico Boyd Robert W Leuchs Gerd February 2015 Observation of optical polarization Mobius strips Science 347 6225 964 966 Bibcode 2015Sci 347 964B doi 10 1126 science 1260635 PMID 25636796 S2CID 206562350 Candeal Juan Carlos Indurain Esteban January 1994 The Moebius strip and a social choice paradox Economics Letters 45 3 407 412 doi 10 1016 0165 1765 94 90045 0 Easdown Martin 2012 Amusement Park Rides Bloomsbury Publishing p 43 ISBN 9781782001522 Hook Patrick 2019 Ticket To Ride The Essential Guide to the World s Greatest Roller Coasters and Thrill Rides Chartwell Books p 20 ISBN 9780785835776 Tobler Waldo R 1961 A world map on a Mobius strip Surveying amp Mapping 21 486 Kumler Mark P Tobler Waldo R January 1991 Three world maps on a Moebius strip Cartography and Geographic Information Systems 18 4 275 276 doi 10 1559 152304091783786781 Courant Richard 1940 Soap film experiments with minimal surfaces The American Mathematical Monthly 47 3 167 174 doi 10 1080 00029890 1940 11990957 JSTOR 2304225 MR 0001622 Goldstein Raymond E Moffatt H Keith Pesci Adriana I Ricca Renzo L December 2010 Soap film Mobius strip changes topology with a twist singularity Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 51 21979 21984 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10721979G doi 10 1073 pnas 1015997107 PMC 3009808 Walba David M Richards Rodney M Haltiwanger R Curtis June 1982 Total synthesis of the first molecular Moebius strip Journal of the American Chemical Society 104 11 3219 3221 doi 10 1021 ja00375a051 Pickover 2005 pp 52 58 Gitig Diana October 18 2010 Chemical origami used to create a DNA Mobius strip Ars Technica Retrieved 2022 03 28 a b Emmer Michele Spring 1980 Visual art and mathematics the Moebius band Leonardo 13 2 108 111 doi 10 2307 1577979 JSTOR 1577979 S2CID 123908555 Byers Mark 2018 Charles Olson and American Modernism The Practice of the Self Oxford University Press pp 77 78 ISBN 9780198813255 Crato Nuno 2010 Escher and the Mobius strip Figuring It Out Entertaining Encounters with Everyday Math Springer pp 123 126 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 04833 3 29 Kersten Erik March 13 2017 Mobius Strip I Escher in the Palace Retrieved 2022 04 17 a b Pickover 2005 p 13 Brecher Kenneth 2017 Art of infinity In Swart David Sequin Carlo H Fenyvesi Kristof eds Proceedings of Bridges 2017 Mathematics Art Music Architecture Education Culture Phoenix Arizona Tessellations Publishing pp 153 158 ISBN 978 1 938664 22 9 a b Peterson Ivars 2002 Recycling topology Mathematical Treks From Surreal Numbers to Magic Circles MAA Spectrum Mathematical Association of America Washington DC pp 31 35 ISBN 0 88385 537 2 MR 1874198 Expo 74 symbol selected The Spokesman Review March 12 1972 p 1 Millward Steven April 30 2012 Did Google Drive Copy its Icon From a Chinese App Tech in Asia Retrieved 2022 03 27 via Yahoo News Simbolo do IMPA Para quem e fa do IMPA dez curiosidades sobre o instituto IMPA May 7 2020 Retrieved 2022 03 27 Pickover 2005 pp 156 157 Decker Heinz Stark Eberhard 1983 Mobius Bander und naturlich auch auf Briefmarken Praxis der Mathematik 25 7 207 215 MR 0720681 Thulaseedas Jolly Krawczyk Robert J 2003 Mobius concepts in architecture In Barrallo Javier Friedman Nathaniel Maldonado Juan Antonio Mart inez Aroza Jose Sarhangi Reza Sequin Carlo eds Meeting Alhambra ISAMA BRIDGES Conference Proceedings Granada Spain University of Granada pp 353 360 ISBN 84 930669 1 5 Sequin Carlo H January 2018 Mobius bridges Journal of Mathematics and the Arts 12 2 3 181 194 doi 10 1080 17513472 2017 1419331 S2CID 216116708 Wainwright Oliver October 17 2017 Norman said the president wants a pyramid how starchitects built Astana The Guardian Muret Don May 17 2010 NASCAR Hall of Fame looks fast sitting still Sports Business Journal Gopnik Blake October 17 2014 Pedro Reyes Makes an Infinite Love Seat Artnet News Thomas Nancy J October 4 1998 Making a Mobius a matter of mathematics The Times Trenton p aa3 via NewsBank Pashman Dan August 6 2015 Cut Your Bagel The Mathematically Correct Way The Salt NPR Miller Ross September 5 2014 How to make a mathematically endless strip of bacon The Verge Chang Kenneth January 9 2012 Pasta Graduates From Alphabet Soup to Advanced Geometry The New York Times Pickover 2005 pp 174 177 Pickover 2005 pp 179 187 a b Phillips Tony November 25 2016 Bach and the musical Mobius strip Plus Magazine Reprinted from an American Mathematical Society Feature Column Moskowitz Clara May 6 2008 Music reduced to beautiful math Live Science Retrieved 2022 03 21 Tymoczko Dmitri July 7 2006 The geometry of musical chords PDF Science 313 5783 72 4 Bibcode 2006Sci 313 72T doi 10 1126 science 1126287 JSTOR 3846592 PMID 16825563 S2CID 2877171 Parks Andrew August 30 2007 Mobius Band Friendly Fire Magnet Lawson Dom February 9 2021 Ring Van Mobius Prog Prevos Peter 2018 The Mobius Strip in Magic A Treatise on the Afghan Bands Kangaroo Flat Third Hemisphere Gardner Martin 1956 The Afghan Bands Mathematics Magic and Mystery New York Dover Books pp 70 73 External links edit nbsp Look up Mobius strip in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Moebius Strip at Wikimedia Commons Weisstein Eric W Mobius Strip MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mobius strip amp oldid 1218810205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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