A
closed surface is a surface that is
compact and without
boundary. Examples of closed surfaces include the
sphere, the
torus and the
Klein bottle. Examples of non-closed surfaces include an
open disk (which is a sphere with a
puncture), an
open cylinder (which is a sphere with two punctures), and the
Möbius strip. A surface embedded in
three-dimensional space is closed if and only if it is the boundary of a solid. As with any
closed manifold, a surface embedded in Euclidean space that is closed with respect to the inherited
Euclidean topology is
not necessarily a closed surface; for example, a disk embedded in \mathbb{R}^3 that contains its boundary is a surface that is topologically closed but not a closed surface.
Classification of closed surfaces , and the surface of a cube. (The cube and the sphere are topologically equivalent to each other.) Right: Some surfaces with boundary are the
disk surface, square surface, and hemisphere surface. The boundaries are shown in red. All three of these are topologically equivalent to each other. The
classification theorem of closed surfaces states that any
connected closed surface is homeomorphic to some member of one of these three families: • the
sphere, • the
connected sum of
g tori for
g ≥ 1, • the
connected sum of
k real
projective planes for
k ≥ 1. The surfaces in the first two families are
orientable. It is convenient to combine the two families by regarding the sphere as the connected sum of 0 tori. The number
g of tori involved is called the
genus of the surface. The sphere and the torus have Euler characteristics 2 and 0, respectively, and in general the Euler characteristic of the connected sum of
g tori is . The surfaces in the third family are nonorientable. The Euler characteristic of the real projective plane is 1, and in general the Euler characteristic of the connected sum of
k of them is . It follows that a closed surface is determined, up to homeomorphism, by two pieces of information: its Euler characteristic, and whether it is orientable or not. In other words, Euler characteristic and orientability completely classify closed surfaces up to homeomorphism. Closed surfaces with multiple
connected components are classified by the class of each of their connected components, and thus one generally assumes that the surface is connected.
Monoid structure Relating this classification to connected sums, the closed surfaces up to homeomorphism form a
commutative monoid under the operation of connected sum, as indeed do manifolds of any fixed dimension. The identity is the sphere, while the real projective plane and the torus generate this monoid, with a single relation , which may also be written , since . This relation is sometimes known as '
after Walther von Dyck, who proved it in , and the triple cross surface is accordingly called '. and today a number of proofs exist. Topological and combinatorial proofs in general rely on the difficult result that every compact 2-manifold is homeomorphic to a
simplicial complex, which is of interest in its own right. The most common proof of the classification is , which brings every triangulated surface to a standard form. A simplified proof, which avoids a standard form, was discovered by
John H. Conway circa 1992, which he called the "Zero Irrelevancy Proof" or "ZIP proof" and is presented in . A geometric proof, which yields a stronger geometric result, is the
uniformization theorem. This was originally proven only for Riemann surfaces in the 1880s and 1900s by
Felix Klein,
Paul Koebe, and
Henri Poincaré. == Surfaces with boundary ==