Kenneth Jones
Jason Birch
Worksheet to be completed by a class who would be presented with this material.
Review Questions:
Fill in the blank
- The sphere is locally ______, but in reality has a ______curvature equal to 1.
- The covering argument concerning the sphere would create an infinite number of ______and in hyperbolic space would create an infinite number of ______.
- Dr ______is the best math teacher out there!
- Surfaces like the ______and ______are isometric with the xy-plane.
Challenge Questions:
- Can you think of a way to preserve the geometry of one path on a globe when flattening?
- What do you think occurs at the edge of the universe if = 1 (Remember when omega is equal to one the universe works towards a finite volume)?
- The value is actually a function of time based on the mass and volume of the universe, how is it that a function with infinite inputs can be a static value?
Answers to worksheet:
Review Questions:
Fill in the blank
- The sphere is locally (flat), but in reality has a (Gauss) curvature equal to 1.
- The covering argument concerning the sphere would create an infinite number of (slices or segments) and in hyperbolic space would create an infinite number of (over laps).
- Dr (Sarah) is the best math teacher out there!
- Surfaces like the (cylinder) and (cone) are isometric with the xy-plane.
Challenge Questions:
- Can you think of a way to preserve the geometry of one path on a globe when flattening?
Orientate that path as the equator.
- What do you think occurs at the edge of the universe if = 1 (Remember when omega is equal to one the universe works towards a finite volume)?
I dunno, I have a problem thinking that the universe doesn’t curve back around to itself.
- The value is actually a function of time based on the mass and volume of the universe, how is it that a function with infinite inputs can be a static value?
Consider limits as t approaches infinity. Time is endless so in theory it is the limiting value we are concerned with and not so much an instantaneous value.