I am trying to show that the following space is not Hausdorff. Consider the topological space $S^1$, and let $r$ be an irrational number. Consider the action of $\mathbb{Z}$ on $S^1$ given by $$ S^1\times\mathbb{Z}\to S^1; (e^{ix}, n)\mapsto e^{i(x+2\pi n r)}. $$ Let $S^1/\mathbb{Z}$ denote the orbit space. I want to show that this space is not Hausdorff.
It was suggested to me that I try showing that any orbit under this action is dense in $S^1$, but I am getting stuck on proving that bit. But here is what I was thinking: we know that the topological group $\mathbb{R}/2\pi \mathbb{Z}$ is homeomorphic to $S^1$, as seen by the map $t\mapsto e^{it}$. Denote the following composition of maps $$ \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}/2\pi \mathbb{Z}\simeq S^1\to S^1/\mathbb{Z} $$ by $\phi$. Then if $[e^{ix}]\in S^1/\mathbb{Z}$, it follows that $$ \phi^{-1}([e^{ix}]) = \{x+2\pi(nr+m)\mid n, m\in\mathbb{Z}\}. $$ If I can show that this subset is dense in $\mathbb{R}$, then it follows that the set $[x]$ as a subset of $S^1$ is dense. This is where I am getting stuck, and it is not even clear to me that this is necessarily true.
Any hints or suggestions are appreciated. Thanks!