While teaching a course in differential geometry, I came up with the following problem, which I think is cool.

Assume $\gamma$ is a closed geodesic on a sphere $\Sigma$ with positive Gauss curvature.
Can it look like one of the following curves in a parametrization of $\Sigma\backslash\{\text{point}\}$ by the plane?

[![enter image description here][1]][1]

>I expect that there is a theorem that answers all questions like this. Is it indeed so?

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**P.S.** The first curve cannot appear since by Gauss--Bonnet formula, the sum of angles in the triangle is $>\pi$. It makes the integral of Gauss curvature inside the loops $>4{\cdot}\pi$ which is impossible.

The second curve cannot appear as well, a proof is sketched in my answer. (Please let me know if you see a way to simplify the proof.)

For the third one it is easy to produce an example --- say an ellipsoid has such geodesic.


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/GUQYT.png