L6a4 Further Notes and Views: Difference between revisions
From Knot Atlas
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary |
(add1) |
||
| Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
image = 3D Borromean Rings.png | |
image = 3D Borromean Rings.png | |
||
text = 3D depiction }} |
text = 3D depiction }} |
||
{{Knot View Template| |
|||
image = Borromean Rings Illusion.png | |
|||
text = 3D depiction which purports to show simple circular toruses interlinked as Borromean rings (something which is actually geometrically impossible).}} |
|||
{{Knot View Template| |
{{Knot View Template| |
||
image = 3Loops-Borromean-link.png | |
image = 3Loops-Borromean-link.png | |
||
| Line 51: | Line 54: | ||
image = Borromeanringsthumbnail.JPG | |
image = Borromeanringsthumbnail.JPG | |
||
text = A practical application of the Borromean rings (Ballard Locks, Seattle)}} |
text = A practical application of the Borromean rings (Ballard Locks, Seattle)}} |
||
|- valign=top |
|||
{{Knot View Template| |
{{Knot View Template| |
||
image = 6a4BorromeanRattle_160.jpg | |
image = 6a4BorromeanRattle_160.jpg | |
||
Revision as of 10:56, 27 March 2010
Back to L6a4.
Medieval-style representation of the Borromean rings, used as an emblem of Lorenzo de Medici in San Pancrazio, Florence[1] |
A kolam with 3 cycles [2] |
A Borromean link by Dylan Thurston [3] | |
The Colombo Mall in Lisboa [4] |
|||
A "Borromean" bathroom tile (actually the Diane de Poitiers three crescents emblem) [5] |
A Borromean link at the Fields Institute [6] |
Borromean paper clips [7] | |
A Borromean rattle by Sassy [8] |















