Surface
- For other uses, see Surface (disambiguation).
Definition
In what follows, all surfaces are considered to be second-countable 2-dimensional manifolds.More precisely: a topological surface (with boundary) is a Hausdorff space in which every point has an open neighbourhood homeomorphic to either an open subset of E2 (Euclidean 2-space) or an open subset of the closed half of E2. The set of points which have an open neighbourhood homeomorphic to En is called the interior of the manifold; it is always non-empty. The complement of the interior, is called the boundary; it is a (1)-manifold, or union of closed curves.
A surface with empty boundary is said to be closed if it is compact, and open if it is not compact.
Classification of closed surfaces
There is a complete classification of closed (i.e compact without boundary) connected, surfaces up to homeomorphism. Any such surface falls into one of three infinite collections:
- Spheres with n handles attached (called n-tori). These are orientable surfaces with Euler characteristic 2-2n, also called surfaces of genus n.
- Projective planess with n handles attached. These are non-orientable surfaces with Euler characteristic 1-2n.
- Klein bottles with n handles attached. These are non-orientable surfaces with Euler characteristic -2n.
Compact surfaces
Compact surfaces with boundary are just these with one or more removed open disks whose closures are disjoint.Embeddings in R3
A compact surface can be embedded in R3 if it is orientable or if it has nonempty boundary. It is a consequence of the Whitney embedding theorem that any surface can be embedded in R4.Differential geometry
A simple review of the embedding of a surface in n dimensions, and a computation of the area of such a surface, is provided in the article volume form. Metric properties of Riemann surfaces are briefly reviewed in the the article Poincaré metric.Some models
To make some models, attach the sides of these (and remove the corners to puncture): * * B B
v v v ^ *>>>>>* *>>>>>*
v v v ^ v v v v
A v v A A v ^ A A v v A A v v A
v v v ^ v v v v
v v v ^ *<<<<<* *>>>>>*
* * B B
sphere real projective plane Klein bottle torus
(punctured Möbius band) (donut)
Fundamental polygon
Each closed surface can be constructed from an even sided oriented polygon, called a fundamental polygon by pairwise identification of its edges.This construction can be represented as a string of length 2n of n distinct symbols where each symbol appears twice with exponent either +1 or -1. The exponent -1 signifies that the corresponding edge has the orientation opposing the one of the fundamental polygon.
The above models can be described as follows:
- sphere:
- projective plane: AA