The double torus provides a relativistic model for a closed 2D cosmos with
topology of genus 2 and constant negative curvature. Its unfolding into an
octagon extends to an octagonal tessellation of its universal covering, the
hyperbolic space H^2. The tessellation is analysed with tools from hyperbolic
crystallography. Actions on H^2 of groups/subgroups are identified for SU(1,
1), for a hyperbolic Coxeter group acting also on SU(1, 1), and for the
homotopy group \Phi_2 whose extension is normal in the Coxeter group. Closed
geodesics arise from links on H^2 between octagon centres. The direction and
length of the shortest closed geodesics is computed.Comment: Latex, 27 pages, 5 figures (late submission to arxiv.org