Portal:Mathematics/Selected picture/27

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animation showing a torus (a doughnut shape) being cut diagonally by a plane, causing the appearance of two interlocking circles on the cut surface
animation showing a torus (a doughnut shape) being cut diagonally by a plane, causing the appearance of two interlocking circles on the cut surface
An animation showing how an obliquely cut torus reveals a pair of intersecting circles known as Villarceau circles, named after the French astronomer and mathematician Yvon Villarceau. These are two of the four circles that can be drawn through any given point on the torus. (The other two are oriented horizontally and vertically, and are the analogs of lines of latitude and longitude drawn through the given point.) The circles have no known practical application and seem to be merely a curious characteristic of the torus. However, Villarceau circles appear as the fibers in the Hopf fibration of the 3-sphere over the ordinary 2-sphere, and the Hopf fibration itself has interesting connections to fluid dynamics, particle physics, and quantum theory.