How about Cheerios? (Or Froot Loops, or any other toroidal cereal of your choice.) I can't think of any non-breakfast foods of genus one, and I can't think of anything with more holes except for fancy bagels and doughnuts.
David, if you consider that a pretzel is formed by rolling out a sphere of dough and then twisting it, I'd say it's still of genus zero. Of course, after sticking the ends together and baking it, it could be argued that it is now a three-hole torus, but the act of sticking the ends together is not a continuous transformation, and I don't think there is a topological concept of "baking" a topological space. So I refuse to accept that a pretzel has holes!
How about Cheerios? (Or Froot Loops, or any other toroidal cereal of your choice.) I can't think of any non-breakfast foods of genus one, and I can't think of anything with more holes except for fancy bagels and doughnuts.
ReplyDeleteLifesavers (technically, a food).
ReplyDeleteIn Croatia, both bagels and doughnuts are of genus zero. So we describe torus as a tyre. :-)
ReplyDeleteHere in Chile we don't even know what a Bagel is. I like to describe the torus as a inner tube.
ReplyDeleteI can't think of anything with more holes except for fancy bagels and doughnuts.
ReplyDeletePretzels!
David, if you consider that a pretzel is formed by rolling out a sphere of dough and then twisting it, I'd say it's still of genus zero. Of course, after sticking the ends together and baking it, it could be argued that it is now a three-hole torus, but the act of sticking the ends together is not a continuous transformation, and I don't think there is a topological concept of "baking" a topological space. So I refuse to accept that a pretzel has holes!
ReplyDeleteIn Philadelphia, pretzels are of genus two.
ReplyDelete