Math Across the Campus

For mini-math exhibits installed in a variety of academic buildings at Wheaton College, I transformed a mathematics professor’s notes into exhibition text.

Unlike the audience for most exhibition text, the audience for these exhibits was very specific: college students, both current and prospective. This made it possible for the text to be more complex than is usually appropriate for a museum audience.

Alexander Horned Sphere

From mathematician’s notes…

to exhibit label:

Alexander’s Horned Wild Sphere I

Bronze
Helaman Ferguson

This “sphere” is part of a story about how wrong intuition can be.

First, why is it called a sphere? Though it may not look like one, this shape is topologically equivalent to a sphere: It can be converted to a sphere, and vice versa, by stretching, twisting, and compressing, without puncturing it or gluing parts together.

In topology, a space is considered to be simply connected if every loop in it could be shrunk to a point. The space around an ordinary sphere in 3-dimensional space is simply connected: If you put a loop around the sphere, there is nothing to prevent the loop from sliding off as it shrinks to a point.

You might think that no matter how you distort a sphere, the space around it will remain simply connected as long as you don’t puncture or glue. Mathematicians thought so for years. One mathematician, J.W. Alexander, even published proofs that this is so, before he imagined the counterexample modeled by this sculpture.

An Alexander Horned Sphere is created by stretching out “horns” from a sphere, twisting them towards each other, stretching out smaller horns, twisting them, and so on ad infinitum. (This sculpture doesn’t have an infinite number of horns, so it’s only an approximation of an Alexander Horned Sphere.) With an infinite number of horns to work around, it would take an infinite amount of time to work the loop free. We end up with what seems to be a paradox: the shape is topologically equivalent to a sphere, but the space around it is not simply connected.