--- author: Stéphane Laurent date: '2018-08-30' highlighter: kate linenums: True output: html_document: keep_md: False md_document: preserve_yaml: True variant: markdown prettify: True prettifycss: 'twitter-bootstrap' tags: 'graphics, geometry, maths' title: The Hopf torus of the tennis ball curve --- In [a previous post](https://laustep.github.io/stlahblog/posts/HopfTorusParametric.html) I explain the construction of the Hopf torus of a closed curve on the sphere, and I show the rendering for a certain spherical curve. On [Paul Bourke's site](http://paulbourke.net/geometry/spherical/index.html), I've found another spherical curve for which the corresponding Hopf torus is prettier. This spherical curve is defined by the three coordinates $$ \begin{cases} p_1(t) & = & \sin\bigl(\pi/2 - (\pi/2 - A) \cos(t)\bigr) \cos\bigl(t/n + A \sin(2t)\bigr) \\ p_2(t) & = & \sin\bigl(\pi/2 - (\pi/2 - A) \cos(t)\bigr) \sin\bigl(t/n + A \sin(2t)\bigr) \\ p_3(t) & = & \cos\bigl(\pi/2 - (\pi/2 - A) \cos(t)\bigr) \end{cases} $$ for $t$ varying from $0$ to $2n\pi$. This is this curve: For $n=2$ and $A \approx 0.44$ it looks like the curve appearing on a tennis ball. For $n=3$ and $A = 0.44$, here is the correspondiing Hopf torus (rendered with Asymptote): ![](figures/HopfTorusTennisBall.png) The parameter $n$ defines the number of lobes of the torus. You can play with it below.