Strangely curved shapes break 50-year-old geometry conjecture
Mathematicians have disproved a major conjecture about the relationship between curvature and shape.
In an old Indian parable, six blind men each touch a different part of an elephant. They disagree about what the elephant must look like: Is it smooth or rough? Is it like a snake (so thinks the man touching the trunk) or a fan (as the man touching the ear proposes)? If the blind men had combined their insights, they might have been able to give a correct account of the nature of the elephant. Instead, they end up fighting.
For decades, topologists have hoped to avoid falling into a similar trap. They thought they could characterize mathematical shapes by synthesizing numerous local measurements. But newly discovered, paradoxically curved spaces show that this isn’t always possible. "Things can be much more wild than what we thought," said Elia Bruè of Bocconi University in Italy, who worked with Aaron Naber of Northwestern University and Daniele Semola of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich to demonstrate this.
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