Construction of Unknotted and Knotted Symmetric Developable Bands

: We describe a method for constructing developable bands with N ≥ 3 half twists. Each band is formed by threading a ﬂat rectangular strip through a scaffold made from identical circular cylinders and smoothly connecting its short ends. The N cylinders in a scaffold are arranged with N -fold rotational symmetry. The number of half twists in a band is equal to the number N of cylinders in its scaffold and each band inherits the symmetry of its scaffold. Each scaffold admits a family of bands of the same length but variable width up to a maximum value determined by the features of the scaffold. Apart from orientable and nonorientable unknots, our method allows for the construction of bands with the topology of torus knots. We detail the geometric properties of the construction, discuss certain fundamental restrictions that must be met to ensure constructability, and calculate the elastic bending energy of each band. The rotational symmetry underlying the construction is essential for obtaining the presented bands, as the general non-symmetric problem is even more complex and has not yet been investigated. The bands and their corresponding scaffolds can be used as structural elements in practical applications, one of which we describe and analyze. The construction serves as a basis for a general framework for building a large variety of scaffolds and the corresponding unstretchable bands. Together, these assemblies can be used in architectural, interior, and machine design. They also open new avenues for the layout of conveyor belts in factories, airports, and other settings. approximated arbitrarily close by a rational number, one ﬁnd a nonconvex scaffold with ω being arbitrarily close to ω


Introduction
In 1930, Sadowsky [1,2] used a constructive argument to establish the existence of a family of isometric deformations from a rectangular strip to a Möbius band with one half twist, settling a controversy that had previously prevailed regarding the existence of such deformations. His construction involves threading a rectangular strip over three circular cylinders, one of diameter equal to the sum of the diameters of the remaining two, arranged so that their axes project onto an equilateral triangle. We present here a new, versatile construction for developable bands with N ≥ 3 half twists using N circular cylinders. For each choice of N, these cylinders are identical and are regularly distributed on a base circle to form a scaffold with N-fold rotational symmetry relative to the symmetry axis of the circle. Each band arising from our construction inherits the symmetry of its supporting scaffold. To convey a sense for the general construction, we show in Figure 1 a stepwise sequence of isometrically deforming a flat rectangular strip into a Möbius band that conforms to a scaffold made from three cylinders.  Figure 8) through a scaffold of three cylinders. The properties that a scaffold must have to allow for the construction of a band are the primary focus of this paper. Starting from the flat configuration, the first cylinder is placed on the strip making contact at the line where parallelogram 1 (yellow and denoted by "1" on the strip) begins. The band is next wrapped around the first cylinder until parallelogram 1 conforms fully to the cylinder. The second cylinder is next placed on the band, making contact along the line where parallelogram 2 begins and the band is wrapped around the second cylinder, until parallelogram 2 conforms fully to the cylinder. The third cylinder is finally put into place and parallelogram 3 is wrapped over it in the same fashion as parallelograms 1 and 2 were wrapped around the first and second cylinders. This aligns the vertical edge of the strip to the right of parallelogram 3 with the edge of the strip to the left of parallelogram 1 and allows for the strip to be smoothly joined into a band, thereby creating a flat trapezoid from the portions of the strip to the left and right of parallelograms 1 and 3.
Having established the existence of a developable Möbius band, Sadowsky [1,2] also formulated a variational problem for determining the equilibrium shape of a free-standing Möbius band with one half twist and reduced the underlying surface integral for the bending energy to an integral over the midline of the band, restricting attention to bands with infinitesimal width-to-length aspect ratios. Although Sadowsky's [1,2] construction is highlighted in an expository article by Schwartz [3], the literature that has developed in response to Sadowsky's [1,2] paper has so far focused entirely on various features of his variational problem. Wunderlich [4,5] generalized Sadowsky's [1,2] dimensional reduction to bands with finite width-to-length aspect ratios. Guven et al. [6] explored the influence of the constraint of isometry on the boundary conditions that apply along the free edge of an unstretchable surface. Seguin et al. [7] extended Wunderlich's [4,5] work to account for the constraints needed to ensure that a solution to the dimensionally reduced variational problem constitutes an isometric and locally injective deformation from a rectangular strip to an unknotted Möbius band, allowing for any number of half twists, and derived the corresponding Euler-Lagrange equations and jump conditions. Starostin and van der Heijden [8] were the first to develop a numerical method for minimizing the Wunderlich [4,5] functional and applied that method to determine the shape of a Möbius band with one half twist. Subsequently, Starostin and van der Heijden [9] applied their method to determine the shapes of multiply twisted bands with and without knots. Shen et al. [10] developed an alternative dynamical scheme for minimizing the Wunderlich [4,5] functional numerically and applied their scheme to determine the shape of a Möbius band with one half twist. In a departure from efforts based on the Wunderlich [4,5] functional, Bartels and Hornung [11] established qualitative properties of Möbius bands that minimize the surface bending energy underlying the dimensional reductions of Sadowsky [1,2] and Wunderlich [4,5] and used numerical simulations to illustrate and bolster their analytical findings. Moore and Healey [12] developed and applied numerical methods to construct and explore the stability of Möbius bands. Velimirović and coworkers [13,14] exposed connections between the literature inspired by Sadowsky's [1,2] work and mathematical investigations directed at minimizing the Willmore [15] functional.
Distinct from the publications cited in the preceding paragraph, we develop here a new construction inspired by Sadowsky's [1,2] original construction. We are not aware of any existing works in this direction. Any of our scaffolds can be designed by selecting three independent parameters: a positive number r representing the radius of a base circle upon which each scaffold is built, an angle ω between 0 and π which depends on the number of cylinders in the scaffold and their connectivity, and an angle α between 0 and π/2 which determines the orientation of the cylinders relative to the plane of the base circle. Each admissible choice of r, ω, and α determines the dimensions and relative orientations of the cylinders that form the scaffold, and the same goes for the length and maximum width of any band that can be constructed upon the scaffold.
The simplification afforded by our use of identical cylinders carries a cost. Sadowsky's [1,2] construction yields Möbius bands with curved portions that cover only half of each of the three cylinders involved and any of his constructions can therefore be achieved with appropriately oriented cylinders of half-circular cross section. In our construction, the turning angle φ over which the band covers each cylinder is not simply 180 • but varies from scaffold to scaffold. We determine φ explicitly in terms of the design angles ω and α.
As with Sadowsky's [1,2] construction, our construction yields developable bands which alternate between flat sections and curved sections that conform to the cylinders of the scaffold. Any such band inhabits a shape obtained by a pure bending of a flat rectangular strip. If such a strip is modeled as a homogeneous, isotropic two-dimensional material, then the energy stored in elastically bending it into a band depends at most on the mean curvature of the deformed shape. For our constructions, one principle curvature vanishes and the other is equal to the diameter of the cylinders that comprise the underlying scaffold. A closed form expression for the total bending energy E can therefore be obtained for any of our constructions. We display that expression in the particular case where the bending energy density depends quadratically on the mean curvature of the band. In addition to complex dependence on the design parameters r, ω, and α, we find that E scales linearly with both the half-width w of the band and inversely with the radius R of the cylinders that form the underlying scaffold.
We show in Section 2.3 that our construction can be applied to create load bearing structures that are easily assembled and disassembled, as exemplified by a table made from a scaffold with three cylinders and the corresponding Möbius band.
For perspective, we discuss generalizations of our construction by, for example, relaxing the requirement that all cylinders must be identical or by allowing the use of more general (not just right circular) cylinders and cones for the scaffold. In conclusion, we formulate a conjecture concerning the constructability of 2π-twisted bands using only cylinders.

Construction
The geometrical features of a band which can be constructed upon a scaffold are entirely determined by the properties of that scaffold, with the exception of the width of the band, which can be chosen freely up to a maximum length, which again depends on that scaffold. For clarity, we consider scaffolds alone before addressing the corresponding bands. The basic properties of our scaffolds are presented in Section 2.1.1. A smooth closed curve of piecewise constant curvature that winds around a scaffold is described in Section 2.1.2 and a limit for the constructability of that curve is derived in Section 2.1.3. Bands are finally considered in Section 2.1.4.

Scaffolds
Each scaffold we consider is constructed relative to a base circle C of radius r > 0. To construct a scaffold of N ≥ 3 identical cylinders, we first identify N equidistant points on C, place a straight line tangent to C at each such point, and rotate each such line around its radial axis going through the center of C and the contact point of the line. This rotation out of the plane of C is performed by an angle α satisfying (1) while maintaining contact with C, as illustrated in Figure 2. These lines serve as the axes of the cylinders once they have been rotated around radial axis of the base circle C by the angle α such that the shortest distance between associated lines equals 2R. (Bottom) The basic construction after cylinders have been added for N = 3, 4, 5 (scaffolds (i), (ii), (iii), respectively) and k = 1 and for N = 5 cylinders (scaffold (iv)) and k = 2. The indicated angle ω depends on the number N of cylinders as well as k and is given by ω = 2πk/N. The integer k ≥ 1 specifies that a cylinder has a common point (in red) with each of the two "k-th" neighboring cylinders. For k = 1, we obtain convex scaffolds (scaffolds (i), (ii), (iii)). For a nonconvex scaffold (k > 1) to be possible (scaffold (iv)) two conditions must be satisfied: k < N/2 and k is not a divisor of N.
We emphasize that the common sense of rotation for all lines, which is either counterclockwise or clockwise, specifies the chirality of the scaffold and all subsequent objects in the construction (namely the connecting curve and the band), as discussed below. Next, we simultaneously allow the lines to grow radially into circular cylinders until their common radius reaches a certain critical value R that is related to the presence of isolated points of tangential contact between certain pairs of cylinders. These isolated tangential contact points between pairs of cylinders are the crucial geometric feature that allows our construction to work because they lead to a common plane tangential to both cylinders in which a corresponding flat section of a spanning band lies. We say that pairs of cylinders that possess such points of contact are 'associated'. Each cylinder of a scaffold is generally associated with two other cylinders that are removed from it by k ≥ 1 cylinders. The scaffolds form regular polygrams which can be further differentiated into two families. For k = 1, each cylinder is associated with its two immediate neighboring cylinders, leading to scaffolds like those depicted in Figure 2 for N = 3 and N = 4. The cylinders in this type of scaffold exhibit tangential points of contact but do not intersect. For k = 1 the contact points form regular polygons (with Schläfi symbol {N}) and we refer to scaffolds of this kind as convex. The scaffolds obtained for k ≥ 2 are distinguished by the presence of contact or overlap between cylinders that are not associated, leading to scaffolds like that shown in Figure 2 for N = 5 and k = 2. Scaffolds of this kind form regular star polygons (with Schläfi symbol {N/k}) and we refer to them as nonconvex. If k ≥ 2, then a scaffold of N ≥ 5 identical cylinders cannot be built unless k satisfies k < N/2 and the ratio N/k is not a natural number (or, equivalently, N and k are "co-prime"). If N/k is a natural number, then the cylinders overlap to create a scaffold consisting of only N/k scaffolds. Hence, no generality is lost by stipulating that N/k is not a natural number.
Each choice of N ≥ 3 and k ≥ 1 yields a scaffold with N-fold rotational symmetry. In such a scaffold, the distance between two adjacent points on the base circle C is given by Since k satisfies 1 < k < N/2, we see from (2) that ω must satisfy See Figure 2 for depictions of ω for the particular scaffolds consisting of N = 3 and N = 4 cylinders, for which case k is necessarily equal to unity, and N = 5 cylinders for k = 1 and k = 2. The radius R of each cylinder in a scaffold is completely determined by r, ω, and α, as is the length L of the cylinders needed to ensure that they extend to contact points with two other associated cylinders, see Figure 3. α L R Figure 3. Side view of the basic construction for N = 3 displaying the tilt angle α, the length L of the cylinders (granted that they are extended until their common endpoints, shown in red, meet), and the radius R of the cylinders.
In the Appendix A, we find that R and L can be expressed as where γ defined through ω and α such that measures the half-angle between the axes of the associated cylinders in the scaffold. Although identities that determine sin γ and tan γ consistent with (5) can be used in (4) to express R and L solely in terms of r, ω, and α, we omit those expressions for brevity. What is evident from the foregoing discussion is that three independent parameters are sufficient to design any one of our scaffolds.

Connecting Curve of a Scaffold
For each choice of the angle ω = 2πk/N and a certain range of the tilt angle α that we consider in Section 2.1.3, the associated rods of a scaffold built as described in Section 2.1.1 can be connected by a smooth closed space curve Γ with piecewise constant curvature, consisting of N identical circular helices separated by N identical straight line segments. We conjecture here that Γ is the shortest closed curve which entwines all cylinders of a scaffold. Whereas a convex scaffold (k = 1) result in an unknotted curve Γ, a nonconvex scaffold (k > 1) leads to an (N, k) torus knot. Each circular helix is necessarily of radius R and pitch 2πR tan γ. Additionally, as we show in the Appendix A, the turning angle φ of each helix can be expressed as where the usual principle values of the arccos function with the range [0, π] are used. With reference to (5), we thus see that φ is completely determined by the angles ω and α (via γ) entering the design of each scaffold. Each helix is therefore of length where Λ, given by measures the distance that the helix traverses along the cylinder axis, as illustrated in Figure 4 for the special case of a scaffold consisting of N = 3 cylinders. Moreover, the straight line segment connecting the helices on a pair of associated cylinders in the scaffold has length The space curve Γ is thus of length l = N(l helix + l line ), which, by (4) 2 , (7), and (9) can be expressed as As with (4) 1 , identities that determine sin γ and tan γ from (5) can be used in (6), (8), and (10) to yield φ, Λ, and l in terms of r, ω, and α alone. We nevertheless omit those expressions for brevity.

Maximum Tilt Angle
For each choice of ω satisfying (3), there exists a maximum value α m of the tilt angle α above which the associated cylinders of a scaffold cannot be connected by a closed space curve Γ of the kind discussed in Section 2.1.2. This upper bound is achieved if the connecting curve intersects the points where each pair of associated cylinders are in tangential contact, as illustrated in Figure 5 for the special case of a scaffold consisting of N = 3 cylinders. We next characterize α m as a function of ω. The length a of the shortest path between a point at which a pair of associated cylinders is in tangential contact and the connecting curve Γ is given by as depicted in Figure 5 for the special case of a scaffold of N = 3 cylinders. The curve Γ therefore passes through the contact point if L = Λ. With reference to the expressions (4) and (8) determining R, L, and Λ in terms of the design parameters r, ω, and α for the scaffold, the condition L = Λ takes the form of a transcendental equation: φ γ γ Λ Figure 4. The connecting curve Γ (in blue) for N = 3. Also shown is the incidence angle γ at which Γ meets the cylinder; γ also appears as half of the angle between the axes of two cylinders which have a common point (in red). Also depicted is the angle φ for which Γ is covering each cylinder and the length Λ for which a helical part of Γ traverses along the cylinder axis. For any admissible choice of ω = 2πk/N, the maximum angle α m is determined by solving (12). Numerical approximations of α m for all possible combinations of N and k with N ≤ 9 are given in Table 1 and are plotted in Figure 6, where the scaffold type is identified with the abbreviated notation N k . Table 1. The maximum tilt angle α m (see Figure 3) resulting from the solution of the transcendental Equation (12) as a function of the number of cylinders N and the knot type k for all bands N k with N ≤ 9.  Figure 6. The maximum tilt angle α m (see Figure 3) for which the connecting curve Γ can be constructed as a function of ω(N, k) resulting from the solution of the transcendental Equation (12). Indicated are all scaffolds N k with N ≤ 9 and the highest possible value for α m occuring at ω * ≈ 124.4393 • (with α * m ≈ 24.9894 • ) which is close to ω 3 1 = 120 • (with α 3 1 m ≈ 24.9443 • ). Considering nonconvex scaffolds, it is easy to find a case with α m > α 3 1 m , for example, 14 5 (with α 14 5 m ≈ 24.9486 • ). Since every real number can be approximated arbitrarily close by a rational number, one can find a nonconvex scaffold with ω being arbitrarily close to ω * . From Figure 6, we see that α as defined by (12) is a nonmonotonic function of ω. On a basic level this can be confirmed by considering the two limits lim ω→0 α m = 0 and lim ω→π α m = 0 and demanding that the function attains an extremum somewhere in its range (0, π) of admissible values. The limit ω → 0 can be thought of as the limit N → ∞, with k being finite, for which the midline of the band approaches the radius r of the base circle C. For k > 1, the midline is a braided torus knot which contracts to C on passing to the limit ω → 0. The limit ω → π is harder to picture since it corresponds to taking N → ∞ while simultaneously taking k → N/2. Under this limit, the point of tangency of each pair of associated cylinders tends to the point at infinity and the cylinders become parallel.
Given a choice of ω satisfying (3), we hereafter restrict α to obey

Planar Development and Maximum width of a Band
Given a base circle of radius r > 0 and an angle ω = 2πk/N satisfying (3), the connecting curve Γ of any scaffold with tilt angle α satisfying 0 < α < α m can serve as the midline of a developable band. Like the curve Γ, the bands that can be constructed on a scaffold are (ribbon-like) unknots or (N, k) torus knots depending on whether the scaffold is convex (k = 1) or nonconvex (k ≥ 2). We use the notation N k to identify the type of any band, exactly as with scaffolds. Moreover, since each winding of the band around a cylinder introduces a π-twist in the orientation, a band may be orientable or nonorientable depending on the number N of cylinders in the supporting scaffold. If N is odd, we obtain nonorientable (Möbius) bands, and if N is even, orientable bands. An illustration of a 5 2 band is shown in Figure 7. While any such band is of the same length l as Γ, its half-width w must not exceed a certain maximum value that is determined by r, ω, and α. Each of these bands consists of N isosceles trapezoids (or, in the extreme limit, isosceles triangles) separated by N curved sections that result from bending, without stretching, parallelograms onto the cylinders of the scaffold. While the flat trapezoidal (or triangular) sections of the band have base angle π/2 − γ, the interior angles of the curved sections are bent from parallelograms with interior angles π/2 ± γ. The heights of these trapezoids (or triangles) and parallelograms must necessarily equal the width 2w of the band. See Figure 8 for an illustration of a band and its planar development in the particular case of a scaffold consisting of N = 3 cylinders. Also, see Figure 1 for a step-by-step sequence of the process of isometrically deforming a flat rectangular strip into a 3 1 band. A knotted band can self-intersect in several ways, as illustrated, for instance, in Figure 9. Detecting such self-intersections is generally a difficult problem that can only be solved numerically. For unknotted bands, only one type of self-intersection is possible and this occurs only for the 3 1 band. In this situation the edge of the band collides with the axis of symmetry at the center of the base circle C if the half-width w is equal to as shown in Figure 10. An interesting special configuration appears for b = a, where a is as defined in (11). In this singular case, the band can extend from the center to the common point, as depicted in Figure 10 for the case N = 3. This configuration is related to a specific critical tilt angle we denote by α c which is given as the solution to the transcendental equation which differs from (12) (15) has no solution. Thus, since the half-width w must obey the restriction w < min{a, b}, the unknotted band with N > 4 can never self-intersect in the center of its scaffold. In general (also for knotted bands), a nontrivial α c with 0 < α c < α m exists only for bands with N/k < 4.

Elastic Bending Energy of a Band
Consider a flat rectangular strip modeled as a homogeneous, isotropic two-dimensional material. From the classical theory of plates, as described for instance in the authoritative treatise of Naghdi [16], the energy stored, per unit area, in elastically deforming such a strip to a surface S must be an isotropic scalar-valued function, say ψ, of the metric and curvature tensors of S. Let the strip form the band corresponding to a scaffold consisting of N identical cylinders built on a base circle of radius r with ω defined by (2) satisfying (3) and tilt angle α satisfying 0 < α < α m . To achieve this deformation, the strip must be of length l given in terms of r, ω, and α by (10). Additionally, we assume that the half-width w of the strip is sufficiently small to ensure that no overlaps of the kind discussed in Section 2.1.4 are present. Since the process of threading the strip through the scaffold involves only bending, the metric tensor of the band is equal to that of the strip, namely the two-dimensional identity tensor, with the consequence that the Gaussian curvature K of the band vanishes identically. Under these circumstances, ψ reduces to a function, sayψ, of the mean curvature H of the band: ψ =ψ(H). (16) Recognizing that with R, the radius of the cylinders that comprise the scaffold, being determined from r, ω, and α through (4), we infer from (16) that the total bending energy E of the band is given by where A = 2Nw l helix denotes the total area of the curved segments of the band. If, in particular,ψ depends quadratically on H, as is commonly assumed in theories for plates, in which case (16) specializes to ψ =ψ(H) = 2µH 2 , with µ > 0 being the constant bending modulus, we then see from (4) 1 , (6)- (8), and (18) and (19) that the total dimensionless bending energy of the band has the explicit form We thus find that the dimensionless bending energy E/Nµ of a band of half-width w constructed upon a scaffold of N cylinders designed on a base circle C of radius r with design angles ω and α that respectively satisfy (3) and (13) scales linearly with the ratio w/r of the half-width of the band to the radius of C but depends intricately on ω and α.
The particular choice (19) of the energy density ψ can be interpreted as a specialization of a model introduced by Germain [17], who considered reference shapes with intrinsic mean curvature H 0 and allowed for general quadratic dependence on the principal curvatures κ 1 and κ 2 of the deformed surface. In terms of the mean and Gaussian curvatures, Germain's energy density reads withμ being an additional modulus that accounts for energy stored in connection with any changes of length that accompany bending. Evidently, (21) reduces to (19) for any isometric deformation of a flat reference shape. The model (21) subsequently became prominent in the early literature on plates, gained interest among geometers and analysts, and was rediscovered in works concerning biomembranes. Perspectives and comprehensive refer-ences concerning the developments in these and other relevant disciplines are provided by Naghdi [16], Stoker [18], Weiner [19], Nitsche [20], Seifert [21], Kuwert and Schätzle [22], Deserno [23], and Guven and Vázquez-Montejo [24].

Force Needed to Tighten an Unknotted Band on Its Supporting Scaffold
So far, we have treated each of our scaffolds as a rigid object upon which bands of certain length and a range of widths can be perfectly fitted. With a view to using our constructions as structural elements, we consider a scaffold consisting of N ≥ 3 cylinders, k = 1, and title angle α and a band of length l determined in terms of r, ω = 2π/N, and α through (10), width w less than the maximum value w m < min(a, b) obtained from (11) and (14), and bending modulus µ as a system (In choosing k = 1, we have restricted attention to constructions that yield unknotted bands. The counterpart of the question considered here is more complicated for k ≥ 2 because the cylinders of the corresponding scaffolds generally overlap). We envision a situation in which the scaffold is rigidly supported by reactive forces normal to the plane of its base circle C and each cylinder is subject to a force f = mg/N, where g denotes the gravitational acceleration, directed toward the plane that supports the scaffold. We then determine the minimum value of m needed to ensure that the system is in static equilibrium. To simplify the analysis, we treat the cylinders as rigid bodies and neglect the weights of the cylinders and the band. We also suppose that the cylinders are capped by half spheres, so that all reactive and applied forces act along their axes.In Section 3, we consider a practical application of this problem in which the total force applied to the scaffold is due to the mass m of the platform. (See, also, Figure 13.) We take each cylinder of the scaffold to be of total length where L b > 0 and L t > 0 respectively represent extensions toward the supporting plane of the scaffold and toward the plane where the loads are applied to the scaffold. We begin with the moment balance for an individual cylinder and determine how an applied force couple created by the pair of forces f (the applied load) and − f (the reaction of the supporting plane) is transmitted to the contact points at which the cylinder is tangent to its associated cylinders, resulting in a force couple with a corresponding pair of forces f c and − f c at those points, see Figure 11. . The force f c is then split up into normal ( f n 1,2 ) and tangential ( f t 1,2 ) components to the cylinder surfaces at the common points. The sum of the forces f t 1,2 leads to a radial force f r acting on the cylinder which needs to be balanced by the band.
leading to the somewhat surprising result that the magnitude of the necessary force does neither depend on the angle φ for which the band is covering the cylinder nor the incidence angle γ. The resulting force f rb exerted by the band on the cylinder is then given by the sum of the two tangential pulling forces of magnitude | f p | acting on the band. The force f rb is radially pointing inward and has the magnitude The forces f r and f rb have to be antiparallel and equal in magnitude to balance each other, leading to an equilibrium in the table construction. If we equate (27) and (30), we find the necessary mass m of the platform for the band to be tightened m = 2Nµw sin ω sin γ |g|rL tot sin α cos α 2 sin 2 γ(1 − cos ω) − sin 2 ω cos 2 α .
To obtain an estimate for m, we consider a table with the proportions identical to the assembled one shown in Figure 13, using N = 3, r = 106 mm, α = 18 • (resulting in L = 271 mm), L b = L t = 265 mm, w = 50 mm, |g| = 9.81 m/s 2 . Even if we assume a rather high value of µ = 20 mJ (a rough estimate for thicker paper of about 140 g/m 2 ), we find a necessary mass of only m = 42 g. The canvas-like material we use for the band of the table shown in Figure 13 certainly has a much lower bending modulus and therefore an even lower necessary mass m. Thus, we conclude that for all practical applications the necessary mass of the plate needed to keep the band tight is exceeded by several orders of magnitude. In other words, on earth the band will always be tight.
To formally determine the mass that the cylinders alone would need to have to tighten the band is a much more involved problem because of their nontrivial spatial orientation. We therefore describe a simple approximation for the influence of the weight of the cylinders. Consider an idealization whereby the entire mass of each cylinder is concentrated as two point masses on the cylinder axis at the beginning and end of the cylinder. Then the force exerted by the point mass at the floor would be balanced by the floor itself and would not contribute any further. The force exerted by the point mass at the top of the cylinder would act identical to the load that the tabletop exerts. So, if the total mass of N cylinders were twice the necessary mass of the tabletop, then the cylinders would exert approximately the same force on the band as the tabletop. In light of the very small necessary mass discussed in the previous paragraph, the mass of the cylinders alone should be sufficient to tighten the band in all practical applications.

Discussion
The reported results nicely illustrate how the presence of an underlying symmetry (in this case an N-fold rotational symmetry) can lead to the discovery of new geometric structures that would be difficult to imagine in the absence of the assumed symmetry. The construction concept of a single common point for two associated cylinders can readily be generalized to systems where cylinders have different lengths and diameters. A simple example exploiting two-fold rotational symmetry is shown in Figure 14. The next step would be to give a general algebraic prescription how to construct bands starting on a cylinder and successively adding more cylinders with choosable dimensions, positions and orientations, given certain geometric constraints. Locally these constraints would still allow for the selection of several design parameters freely. However, the global constraint that the band must be closed constitutes a highly nontrivial condition. This is reminiscent of the problem for closed kinematic chains which locally follow simple geometric constraints but the overall closing of the chain couples all constituents with each other. Another generalization step would be to lift the restraint of using just right circular cylinders and allow for general cylinders and cones. Noting that Sadowsky's classical construction resulted in a band with a π-twist and our bands have Nπ-twists with N ≥ 3, one is naturally led to the question of how to construct a 2π-twisted band. If self-intersections are allowed, an answer is very easy: Take two parallel cylinders which do not touch and wind the band around them in a "figure eight" fashion. However, without self-intersections, the answer seems to be more complicated. We state here the conjecture that it is impossible to construct a 2π-twisted band without self-intersections with just two cylinders. The interesting question is: How many cylinders are needed?
As indicated in Section 2.1.4, nonconvex scaffolds which lead to knotted bands can have nontrivial self-intersections different from the one discussed, as exemplified in Figure 9. An interesting open problem would be to classify the possible categories of self-intersections and how these are related to the connectivity of the scaffold.
Our constructions have the potential to serve as structural elements with load carrying capacity, as shown in the photographs, in Figure 13, of a 3 1 band that binds, entirely without recourse to fasteners or adhesives, three aluminum cylinders (with 3D-printed spherical caps) which support an acrylic tabletop parallel to the plane of construction. The band is made from a synthetic printing canvas and is the limiting factor for the load-carrying capacity of the assembly because the band is likely to tear at some critical load. During a load test, the table depicted in Figure 13 supported an additional mass of 103 kg without difficulty, showing that this particular assembly can easily carry a mass of 120 kg (on planet earth). Since they are easy to assemble and disassemble, structural elements like these reduce the space needed for storage or transport.
All possible bands N k with N ≤ 9 can be explored in an interactive viewer available online at https://hannes.home.oist.jp/projects/babylon/cylinderband.html (accessed on 8 March 2021). After selecting N k , one can set the tilt angle α and the band width freely within their bounds.
Author Contributions: Conceptualization, J.S. and E.F.; software, J.S.; formal analysis, J.S. and E.F.; writing-original draft preparation, J.S. and E.F.; visualization, J.S. and M.G.; supervision, E.F. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding:
The authors gratefully acknowledge support from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University with subsidy funding from the Cabinet Office, Government of Japan.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A
We provide concise derivations of the geometric quantities central to the construction. Referring to Figure A1, we introduce a right-handed orthonormal basis {ı, , k} with k normal to the plane of the base circle C and  directed from the center of an arbitrarily chosen cylinder to the center of C. This setup is illustrated in Figure A1, the chosen cylinder is in front of the remaining two cylinders and its axis lies in the plane spanned by ı and . We begin with the vector s directed from the center of the chosen cylinder to the center of its associated cylinder on its immediate right, as defined by s = r sin ω ı + r(1 − cos ω). (A1) Let u and w be unit vectors aligned with the axes of the chosen cylinder and the associated cylinder on its immediate right, respectively, with u directed away from the common point of the cylinders and w directed toward that point. (Common points are indicated by red spheres in Figure A1.) Relative to the basis {ı, , k}, these vectors read u = − cos α ı + sin α k, w = − cos α(cos ω ı + sin ω ) + sin α k. We next calculate the length L of the cylinders. To achieve this, it suffices to determine the value of L for which the length |p| of the vector p directed from the axis of the chosen cylinder to the axis of its associated cylinder on the immediate right is minimal. Since p = s + (u + w)L/2, it follows that |p| is minimal if and only if (s + (u + w)L/2) · (u + w) = 0, with the consequence that L = − 2s · (u + w) (u + w) · (u + w) = 2 sin ω cos α 2 − (1 − cos ω) cos 2 α r.
As is apparent from Figures 4 and A1, the incidence angle γ is directly related to the unit vectors along the cylinder axes and is thus determined by cos 2γ = −u · w or, equivalently, To determine the angle φ traversed by the helix that winds around each cylinder, we introduce the counterpart q of the vector p corresponding to the chosen cylinder and its associated cylinder on the immediate left. Since each cylinder is of the same radius, |q| = |p|. Recalling that p = s + (u + w)L/2 and observing that relative to the basis {ı, , k}, p and q only differ by the signs of their components along , as illustrated in Figure A1, we find that φ is given by φ = 2π − arccos − p · q |p||q| = 2π − arccos (1 − cos ω) cos 2 α + 2 cos ω (1 − cos ω) cos 2 α − 2 . (A6)