Morin surfaceThe Morin surface is the half-way model of the sphere eversion discovered by Bernard Morin. It features fourfold rotational symmetry. If the original sphere to be everted has its outer surface colored green and its inner surface colored red, then when the sphere is transformed through homotopy into a Morin surface, half of the outwardly visible Morin surface will be green, and half red:
Then, rotating the surface 90° around its axis of symmetry will exchange its colors, i.e. will exchange the inner-outer polarity of the orientable surface, so that retracing the steps of the homotopy at exactly the same position back to the original sphere after having so rotated the Morin surface will yield a sphere whose outer surface is red and whose inner surface is green: a sphere which has been turned inside out. The following is a summary of the eversion: 1. sphere: green outside, red inside... Structure of the Morin surfaceThe Morin surface can be separated into four congruent quarter sections. These sections may be here called section East, section South, section West, and section North, or — respectively — section 0, section 1, section 2, and section 3.
The Morin surface has a quadruple point through which passes its axis of symmetry. This quadruple point is the starting point and the end point of six lines of double points. Each of the quarter sections is bounded by three of these lines of double points, so that each quarter section is homeomorphic to a triangle. Section East is now shown schematically: This is how section East is joined to the other sections: let each of its bounding loops be specified by an ordered quintuple of points, then where unprimed points belong to section 0 (East), primed points belong to section 1 (South), double-primed points belong to section 2 (West), and triple-primed points belong to section 3 (North). The remaining three loops connect sections as follows: Section East has, considered just by itself, one loop of double points: AHIJA. If the surface is unwound and flattened the result will be the following: Joining the four triangular sections at their seams will produce a tetrahedron: Morin surface gallery
Analytic Morin surfaceMorin surface can be elegantly described by a set of equations[1] in either open version (with poles sent to infinity) or closed. Analytic Morin surface gallerySee alsoReferences
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