Weyl fermions are hypothetical chiral particles that can also manifest as
excitations near three-dimensional band crossing points in lattice systems.
These quasiparticles are subject to the Nielsen-Ninomiya "no-go" theorem when
placed on a lattice, requiring the total chirality across the Brillouin zone to
vanish. This constraint results from the topology of the (orientable) manifold
on which they exist. Here, we ask to what extent the concepts of topology and
chirality of Weyl points remain well-defined when the underlying manifold is
non-orientable. We show that the usual notion of chirality becomes ambiguous in
this setting, allowing for systems with a non-zero total chirality.
Furthermore, we discover that Weyl points on non-orientable manifolds carry an
additional Z2 topological invariant which satisfies a different
no-go theorem. We implement such Weyl points by imposing a non-symmorphic
symmetry in the momentum space of lattice models. Finally, we experimentally
realize all aspects of their phenomenology in a photonic platform with
synthetic momenta. Our work highlights the subtle but crucial interplay between
the topology of quasiparticles and of their underlying manifold