Here’s how to make an origami torus with the fewest folds possible

To turn a paper sheet into a doughnutlike shape, you need to fold it into at least 16 triangles

It’s possible to make a torus by folding a paper sheet just 24 times. The torus has a hole running through the center of it (shown in a computer-generated video).

Richard Evan Schwartz

Folding a flat piece of paper into a torus — a shape with a hole in the middle — demands origami skill. That’s something mathematician Richard Evan Schwartz lacks. Yet he answered a lingering mathematical question about the process.

His work — performed mainly on a computer rather than with paper — reveals the smallest number of folds needed to make a paper torus. The paper must have at least 24 folds, forming 16 triangles that meet at eight points, or vertices, Schwartz reports in the May 26 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

To make a torus from a piece of paper, you can roll it into a tube and bend the tube to connect its two ends, making a doughnut. That would probably involve some inelegant crinkling and potentially a few paper cuts.

A more refined method involves creasing the paper in a definite number of triangles, allowing it to elegantly fold into the desired shape. Schwartz, of Brown University in Providence, R.I., has an affinity for minimal mathematical objects; he previously found the shortest possible Möbius strip. So he wanted to know how to make a torus with the fewest folds, or equivalently, the smallest number of vertices.

To create a torus from a flat piece of paper, a mathematical requirement must be met at each of the torus’s vertices — the places where triangles meet. For each vertex on the torus, the angles of the triangles that meet there should add up to 360 degrees. Think of a pizza, cut into slices. Add up the angles at the tip of each slice and you’ll get 360 degrees.

A torus with nine vertices that met this condition had been discovered previously. Mathematicians had also described a torus with just seven vertices, but no one knew whether all seven could meet the pizza-slice requirement. Schwartz proved one of the vertices would always fail that test, ruling out a seven-vertex paper torus.

Then, Schwartz used machine learning to see if a torus with eight vertices was possible. His program identified a folding pattern that worked. When constructed, it looks like a pup tent with an extra flap inside. Schwartz created a pattern so anyone can fold their own — as long as their origami skills are up to the task.

Senior physics writer Emily Conover has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago. She is a two-time winner of the D.C. Science Writers’ Association Newsbrief award and a winner of the Acoustical Society of America’s Science Communication Award.