A shape with finite volume but infinite surface area—you can fill it with paint, but never paint its surface
In 1643, Italian mathematician Evangelista Torricelli discovered something that seemed impossible: a three-dimensional object that extends infinitely yet contains a finite amount of space.
Take the curve y = 1/x and rotate it around the x-axis from x = 1 to infinity. The resulting "horn" shape (also called Torricelli's Trumpet) has a volume of exactly π cubic units—but its surface area is infinite!
Watch how volume approaches π while surface area grows without bound:
The paradox arises from confusing mathematical paint with physical paint:
Mathematical paint has zero thickness. The volume of paint needed to coat a surface is surface area × thickness = ∞ × 0, which is indeterminate, not infinite.
Physical paint has actual thickness. As you go further down the horn, it eventually becomes narrower than any paint molecule could fit! So physical paint would only cover a finite portion.
The real insight: infinite surface area doesn't require infinite volume to cover it—it only requires that the covering layer become infinitely thin.
Evangelista Torricelli publishes "De solido hyperbolico acuto" describing this paradoxical solid. It astounds the mathematical community.
Thomas Hobbes and John Wallis engage in fierce debates about the nature of infinity, partly inspired by this discovery.
The development of calculus by Newton and Leibniz provides rigorous tools to analyze such infinite processes.
Gabriel's Horn remains a classic example in calculus courses, illustrating the subtleties of improper integrals and infinity.