I know $\mathbb{S}^2$ is the universal cover of $\mathbb{R}P^2$, but can $\mathbb{R}P^2$ be a covering space (at all) of $\mathbb{S}^2$?
Attempt at solution
It's clear that for a umramified covering with degree $n$ between surfaces, the euler characteristic of the covering space must be $n$ times the Euler characteristic of the image space. $\chi(\mathbb{R}P^2)=1$ and $\chi(\mathbb{S}^2)=2$, and clearly $1\neq n\cdot 2$ for any $n$. So the cover cannot be $n$-fold, but can the fibers be countable or the cover non-ramified?
The fact that the sphere $\mathbb S^2$ is actually a twofold cover of the real projective plane shows that that projective plane is not simply connected (in fact the loop formed by "going around" any projective line once cannot be contracted, although going around it twice can be), while the sphere (like any universal cover) is simply connected. But any covering of a simply connected space must be simply connected (to contract a loop upstairs just project down, contract the image loop there, and follow suit above). So the real projective plane cannot cover the sphere.