I confess to being puzzled to read a statement that some specific surface "has intrinsic curvature".
Every surface has intrinsic curvature! (OK, just surfaces that are twice continuously differentiable.)
By a "surface" here I mean a metric surface, with the natural type of metric that surfaces and any manifolds can have: a Riemannian metric:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemannian_manifold. (This is a smooth choice of inner product on the space of tangent vectors at each point of the surface. Using this, any smooth curve on the surface has a well-defined length, namely the integral of the lengths of its velocity vectors.)
Intrinsic curvature just means the curvature that can be measured by referring only to the geometry of the surface itself, and
not to a space (like Euclidean space) in which the surface may happen to find itself.
In fact, every surface (and I'm thinking of any two surfaces as being the same if there is a distance-preserving bijection between them — an isometry) can in principle be defined without reference to any space containing it. For example, a square torus T
2 can be defined as
T2 = {(x,y) | 0 ≤ x ≤ 1, 0 ≤ y ≤ 1} / ~
where ~ indicates that, for all y, (0,y) and (1,y) are to be considered as the same point, and likewise for all x, (x,0) and (x,1) are to be considered the same point. This can be thought of as the cartesian product of two circles, each of circumference = 1.
For convenience, let m(x
1,x
2) be defined as the distance function on a circle of circumference = 1 in terms of two points x
1, x
2 with 0 ≤ x
1 ≤ 1, 0 ≤ x
2 ≤ 1. That is,
m(x1,x2) = min{|x2-x1|, 1-|x2-x1|}.
(The distance between two points on a circle is the shorter of the two arcs between them.)
Then T
2 can be given its natural distance formula
D((x1,y1), (x2,y2)) = √( m(x1,x2)2 + m(y1,y2)2 ).
Note that we haven't made any assumption about "where" this surface T
2 is supposed to be. It just
is. (Incidentally, this surface does not exist in 3-space, but it is easy to construct it in 4-space.)
P.S. Incidentally, one way to approximate a surface of constant negative curvature in R
3 is to put together regular planar heptagons, 3 per vertex. To make this a smooth surface, negatively curved heptagons could be used. Interestingly, one can continue this process only so far before the surface bumps into itself! There is no way to place a smooth surface of constant negative curvature in R
3, extended indefinitely in all directions, without its bumping into itself. This is a theorem of Hilbert: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert%27s_theorem_(differential_geometry ). This may explain why a Savoy cabbage is always finite (:-)>.