Talk:Surface (geometry)
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Workgroup category or categories | Mathematics Workgroup [Categories OK] |
Article status | Stub: no more than a few sentences |
Underlinked article? | Yes |
Basic cleanup done? | Yes |
Checklist last edited by | --AlekStos 14:46, 26 March 2007 (CDT) |
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Are surfaces necessarily infinite?
Is a surface only something like a plane or sphere, which has no edges, or would one face of a cube count as a surface? If a surface necessarily has no edges, isn't it misleading to say it has length and breadth? --Catherine Woodgold 20:20, 27 April 2007 (CDT)
- I think the point here is that surfaces are 2-dimensional. In algebraic geometry, you can consider surfaces defined over arbitrartry fields (even finite ones), but in differfdential geometry you're pretty much limited to R (or C). But even in the case of algebraic surfaces, you usually work over an algebraically closed field and then talk about points definable (or "rational") over a subfield. Greg Woodhouse 21:37, 27 April 2007 (CDT)
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