Sphere eversion

A Morin surface seen from "above"
Sphere eversion process as described in [1]
Paper sphere eversion and Morin surface
Paper Morin surface (sphere eversion halfway) with hexagonal symmetry

In differential topology, sphere eversion is the process of turning a sphere inside out in a three-dimensional space (the word eversion means "turning inside out"). It is possible to smoothly and continuously turn a sphere inside out in this way (allowing self-intersections of the sphere's surface) without cutting or tearing it or creating any crease. This is surprising, both to non-mathematicians and to those who understand regular homotopy, and can be regarded as a veridical paradox; that is something that, while being true, on first glance seems false.

More precisely, let

be the standard embedding; then there is a regular homotopy of immersions

such that ƒ0 = ƒ and ƒ1 = −ƒ.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference sev-eq was invoked but never defined (see the help page).