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  • I've been sewing,

  • along with a friend of mine,

  • a Klein bottle hat. My question for the Klein bottle hat

  • requires that I inset a zipper.

  • Which is why my trusty old Pfaff has a zipper foot.

  • Why would I want a zipper in a Klein bottle?

  • I've been told over and over again that if I cut a Klein bottle in half,

  • I'll get twobius loops.

  • So let me unzip my Klein bottle

  • into

  • two pieces of fabric, ja? Here's one half of the Klein bottle.

  • Here's the other half of the Klein bottle. Check this out. This half Klein bottle has a half a twist.

  • This edge comes over, around, and then goes under.

  • This is a Möbius loop. Yeah, it's wider in one part than the other, but it's a Möbius loop.

  • This is also a Möbius loop. It looks almost the same, with an interesting difference. Check this out.

  • This also is a Möbius loop, except where this one goes over, this one goes under.

  • If this is a right-handedbius loop, this is a left-handedbius loop.

  • I can zip these twobius loops together. This guy zips into here.

  • And,

  • with only a little bit of finagling,

  • come on, finagle. So here's a fabric Klein bottle.

  • Twobius loops, one left-handed, one right-handed,

  • together, makes a Klein bottle. My head's too big still.

  • Which is why I've begun making a bigger one of these. So I've got out the

  • fabric, a zipper foot, have a long zipper, so my next week's project is to make a

  • bigger Klein bottle hat that will be properly

  • fitted to me.

  • And I hope will be like my knitted Klein bottle hats, that, you know, actually work properly.

  • !!!!

  • Yeah, if I take a fabric Klein bottle and cut it in half, I'll get twobius loops.

  • What happens if I cut a glass Klein model in half?

  • Check this out. Come here. Keep keep going, Brady. Come on. Keep going, come on!

  • [frantic exclamations]

  • Let's go down.

  • Okay, so how do you cut a Klein bottle in half? First thing you need is a diamond saw.

  • Okay, here's a diamond saw, right here. Look along here, there's a diamond blade. Flip it on,

  • and I can cut practically anything.

  • I have a tile.

  • I can cut.

  • It's a diamond saw, so it cuts through tile like butter. Cuts through glass real easy.

  • Well, what I'd like to do is take a Klein bottle,

  • put it in here and cut it.

  • Problem is, to cut glass as fragile as this, I have to go very slowly.

  • So,

  • I can't push it with my hand because I'd be going v-v-v-v.

  • I need a way to guide this carefully in a straight line.

  • I built a linear table that will, instead of having nice expensive

  • linear bearings,

  • I just used a couple drawer slides, a couple pieces of Plexiglass, a hinge,

  • and everything's held together with the usual things like this.

  • I can take a glass Klein bottle, put some Velcro on the bottom and then put a magnet inside of it.

  • Little magnet right there.

  • Magnet will be held here. Velcro is held there.

  • Everything is held together, I hope like this.

  • Okay, I now have a Klein bottle held in place,

  • and all I need to do is bring it this way, it'll slice by way of the,

  • by way of the diamond saw.

  • So instead of just slicing it by pulling with my hand,

  • I have a threaded rod, and the threaded rod will be pulled along by way of a drill

  • which is computer-controlled. I have a little Arduino that will...

  • [1.21 Jeegawatts!]

  • Half a Klein bottle. Another half of a Klein bottle.

  • So, we now see two half Klein bottles, put together,

  • one complete Klein bottle,

  • two halves.

  • Okay, this is fresh from the diamond saw, so it's covered with dust - glass dust. But let's look at this carefully.

  • I'll start my finger right here,

  • carry around here,

  • around, around,

  • around and back. This has one edge.

  • Right? One edge. I start here, loop around,

  • over here, along here, back across

  • to here. One edge. How about, how many sides does it have? Well, let's start right here.

  • I can go all the way over to here.

  • around, and if that wall weren't in the way, I'd be right back to here. It's a Möbius loop. It's got one side,

  • one edge, a half twist, and if I were to look carefully, I'd notice that this one,

  • thisbius loop has the opposite handedness of thisbius loop.

  • So, slice a Klein bottle in half,

  • you end up with twobius loops. Glassbius, they're glassbius loops, admittedly, but it's the real thing.

  • Okay, I built a machine that'll slice a piece of glass. That'll slice a Klein bottle.

  • Let's cut a camera in half.

  • Got an old Russian Zenit 35 millimeter camera.

  • Ran it through my machine.

  • Have a sliced camera.

  • And the lens, of course, is the cool part.

  • A four-element lens, three of whi-

  • two, oh, five-element lens, glued together like this, straight out of my slicing machine. Since this is numberphile,

  • and it's math, is to talk about the wonderful mathematics of

  • lenses.

  • Ah, there is wonderful mathematics in a zoom lens!

  • Tracing rays and figuring out where the focus is. Making sure that the fo- that no intermediate focus lies on the edge of a lens.

  • Making sure that there's

  • that all rays from around the edge come to the same focus. I'd love to talk about it.

  • Maybe some other time.

I've been sewing,

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