To give a talk to 17-18 years old (who have a knack for mathematics) about how interesting mathematics (and more specifically pure mathematics) can be, I wanted to use nice facts accompanied by nice looking visualizations. However, the underlying mathematics should not be too trivial, otherwise it will not seem challenging to the students. I already looked into Chaos-Math and Dimensions-Math, which provided me with useful material, and I was wondering if anyone knows of similar things? I'm sure there have to be things in differential geometry, or topology, that are equally inviting!
Thanks!












Here is a beautiful video about sphere eversion.
Here is a beautiful video about Möbius transformations.
Here is a gallery of surfaces in differential/algebraic geometry. There are dozens of beautiful images here -- and there is so much to say about all of them. Examples:
Here are pictures of the Weierstrass function and of $f(z) = \text{exp}(1/z)$. The Weierstrass function is continuous but nowhere differentiable. The second function provides a visual example of Picard's Theorem in action. Both of these are pretty mind-blowing, I think.
And lastly, here is a picture of the phenomenon of holonomy, which is a topic I'm considering researching. Notice that the north-pointing vector at $A$ is parallel transported in a loop, yet returns to point $A$ rotated.