).
The figure 8 immersion To make the "figure 8" or "bagel"
immersion of the Klein bottle, one can start with a
Möbius strip and curl it to bring the edge to the midline; since there is only one edge, it will meet itself there, passing through the midline. It has a particularly simple parametrization as a "figure-8" torus with a half-twist: :\begin{align} x & = \left(r + \cos\frac{\theta}{2}\sin v - \sin\frac{\theta}{2}\sin 2v\right) \cos \theta\\ y & = \left(r + \cos\frac{\theta}{2}\sin v - \sin\frac{\theta}{2}\sin 2v\right) \sin \theta\\ z & = \sin\frac{\theta}{2}\sin v + \cos\frac{\theta}{2}\sin 2v \end{align} for 0 ≤
θ 2. In this immersion, the self-intersection circle (where sin(
v) is zero) is a geometric
circle in the
xy plane. The positive constant
r is the radius of this circle. The parameter
θ gives the angle in the
xy plane as well as the rotation of the figure 8, and
v specifies the position around the 8-shaped cross section. With the above parametrization the cross section is a 2:1
Lissajous curve.
4-D non-intersecting A non-intersecting 4-D parametrization can be modeled after that of the
flat torus: :\begin{align} x & = R\left(\cos\frac{\theta}{2}\cos v - \sin\frac{\theta}{2}\sin 2v\right) \\ y & = R\left(\sin\frac{\theta}{2}\cos v + \cos\frac{\theta}{2}\sin 2v\right) \\ z & = P\cos\theta\left(1 + \varepsilon\sin v\right) \\ w & = P\sin\theta\left(1 + {\varepsilon}\sin v\right) \end{align} where
R and
P are constants that determine aspect ratio,
θ and
v are similar to as defined above.
v determines the position around the figure-8 as well as the position in the x-y plane.
θ determines the rotational angle of the figure-8 as well and the position around the z-w plane.
ε is any small constant and
ε sin
v is a small
v dependent bump in
z-w space to avoid self intersection. The
v bump causes the self intersecting 2-D/planar figure-8 to spread out into a 3-D stylized "potato chip" or saddle shape in the x-y-w and x-y-z space viewed edge on. When
ε=0 the self intersection is a circle in the z-w plane .
3D pinched torus / 4D Möbius tube The pinched torus is perhaps the simplest parametrization of the Klein bottle in both three and four dimensions. It can be viewed as a variant of a torus that, in three dimensions, flattens and passes through itself on one side. Unfortunately, in three dimensions this parametrization has two
pinch points, which makes it undesirable for some applications. In four dimensions the
z amplitude rotates into the
w amplitude and there are no self intersections or pinch points. :\begin{align} x(\theta, \varphi) &= (R + r \cos \theta) \cos{\varphi} \\ y(\theta, \varphi) &= (R + r \cos \theta) \sin{\varphi} \\ z(\theta, \varphi) &= r \sin \theta \cos\left(\frac{\varphi}{2}\right) \\ w(\theta, \varphi) &= r \sin \theta \sin\left(\frac{\varphi}{2}\right) \end{align} One can view this as a tube or cylinder that wraps around, as in a torus, but its circular cross section flips over in four dimensions, presenting its "backside" as it reconnects, just as a Möbius strip cross section rotates before it reconnects. The 3D orthogonal projection of this is the pinched torus shown above. Just as a Möbius strip is a subset of a solid torus, the Möbius tube is a subset of a toroidally closed
spherinder (solid
spheritorus).
Bottle shape The following parametrization of the usual 3-dimensional immersion of the bottle itself is much more complicated. :\begin{align} x(u, v) = -&\frac{2}{15}\cos u \left(3\cos{v} - 30\sin{u} + 90\cos^4{u}\sin{u}\right. - \\ &\left.60\cos^6{u}\sin{u} + 5\cos{u}\cos{v}\sin{u}\right) \\[3pt] y(u, v) = -&\frac{1}{15}\sin u \left(3\cos{v} - 3\cos^2{u}\cos{v} - 48\cos^4{u}\cos{v} + 48\cos^6{u}\cos{v}\right. -\\ &60\sin{u} + 5\cos{u}\cos{v}\sin{u} - 5\cos^3{u}\cos{v}\sin{u} -\\ &\left.80\cos^5{u}\cos{v}\sin{u} + 80\cos^7{u}\cos{v}\sin{u}\right) \\[3pt] z(u, v) = &\frac{2}{15} \left(3 + 5\cos{u}\sin{u}\right) \sin{v} \end{align} for 0 ≤
u < π and 0 ≤
v < 2π. == Homotopy classes ==