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Knot theory

In topology, knot theory is the study of mathematical knots. While inspired by knots which appear in daily life, such as those in shoelaces and rope, a mathematical knot differs in that the ends are joined so it cannot be undone, the simplest knot being a ring (or "unknot"). In mathematical language, a knot is an embedding of a circle in 3-dimensional Euclidean space, . Two mathematical knots are equivalent if one can be transformed into the other via a deformation of upon itself (known as an ambient isotopy); these transformations correspond to manipulations of a knotted string that do not involve cutting it or passing it through itself.

Examples of different knots including the trivial knot (top left) and the trefoil knot (below it)
A knot diagram of the trefoil knot, the simplest non-trivial knot

Knots can be described in various ways. Using different description methods, there may be more than one description of the same knot. For example, a common method of describing a knot is a planar diagram called a knot diagram, in which any knot can be drawn in many different ways. Therefore, a fundamental problem in knot theory is determining when two descriptions represent the same knot.

A complete algorithmic solution to this problem exists, which has unknown complexity.[1] In practice, knots are often distinguished using a knot invariant, a "quantity" which is the same when computed from different descriptions of a knot. Important invariants include knot polynomials, knot groups, and hyperbolic invariants.

The original motivation for the founders of knot theory was to create a table of knots and links, which are knots of several components entangled with each other. More than six billion knots and links have been tabulated since the beginnings of knot theory in the 19th century.

To gain further insight, mathematicians have generalized the knot concept in several ways. Knots can be considered in other three-dimensional spaces and objects other than circles can be used; see knot (mathematics). For example, a higher-dimensional knot is an n-dimensional sphere embedded in (n+2)-dimensional Euclidean space.

History edit

 
Intricate Celtic knotwork in the 1200-year-old Book of Kells

Archaeologists have discovered that knot tying dates back to prehistoric times. Besides their uses such as recording information and tying objects together, knots have interested humans for their aesthetics and spiritual symbolism. Knots appear in various forms of Chinese artwork dating from several centuries BC (see Chinese knotting). The endless knot appears in Tibetan Buddhism, while the Borromean rings have made repeated appearances in different cultures, often representing strength in unity. The Celtic monks who created the Book of Kells lavished entire pages with intricate Celtic knotwork.

 
The first knot tabulator, Peter Guthrie Tait

A mathematical theory of knots was first developed in 1771 by Alexandre-Théophile Vandermonde who explicitly noted the importance of topological features when discussing the properties of knots related to the geometry of position. Mathematical studies of knots began in the 19th century with Carl Friedrich Gauss, who defined the linking integral (Silver 2006). In the 1860s, Lord Kelvin's theory that atoms were knots in the aether led to Peter Guthrie Tait's creation of the first knot tables for complete classification. Tait, in 1885, published a table of knots with up to ten crossings, and what came to be known as the Tait conjectures. This record motivated the early knot theorists, but knot theory eventually became part of the emerging subject of topology.

These topologists in the early part of the 20th century—Max Dehn, J. W. Alexander, and others—studied knots from the point of view of the knot group and invariants from homology theory such as the Alexander polynomial. This would be the main approach to knot theory until a series of breakthroughs transformed the subject.

In the late 1970s, William Thurston introduced hyperbolic geometry into the study of knots with the hyperbolization theorem. Many knots were shown to be hyperbolic knots, enabling the use of geometry in defining new, powerful knot invariants. The discovery of the Jones polynomial by Vaughan Jones in 1984 (Sossinsky 2002, pp. 71–89), and subsequent contributions from Edward Witten, Maxim Kontsevich, and others, revealed deep connections between knot theory and mathematical methods in statistical mechanics and quantum field theory. A plethora of knot invariants have been invented since then, utilizing sophisticated tools such as quantum groups and Floer homology.

In the last several decades of the 20th century, scientists became interested in studying physical knots in order to understand knotting phenomena in DNA and other polymers. Knot theory can be used to determine if a molecule is chiral (has a "handedness") or not (Simon 1986). Tangles, strings with both ends fixed in place, have been effectively used in studying the action of topoisomerase on DNA (Flapan 2000). Knot theory may be crucial in the construction of quantum computers, through the model of topological quantum computation (Collins 2006).

Knot equivalence edit

 
 
On the left, the unknot, and a knot equivalent to it. It can be more difficult to determine whether complex knots, such as the one on the right, are equivalent to the unknot.

A knot is created by beginning with a one-dimensional line segment, wrapping it around itself arbitrarily, and then fusing its two free ends together to form a closed loop (Adams 2004) (Sossinsky 2002). Simply, we can say a knot   is a "simple closed curve" (see Curve) — that is: a "nearly" injective and continuous function  , with the only "non-injectivity" being  . Topologists consider knots and other entanglements such as links and braids to be equivalent if the knot can be pushed about smoothly, without intersecting itself, to coincide with another knot.

The idea of knot equivalence is to give a precise definition of when two knots should be considered the same even when positioned quite differently in space. A formal mathematical definition is that two knots   are equivalent if there is an orientation-preserving homeomorphism   with  .

What this definition of knot equivalence means is that two knots are equivalent when there is a continuous family of homeomorphisms   of space onto itself, such that the last one of them carries the first knot onto the second knot. (In detail: Two knots   and   are equivalent if there exists a continuous mapping   such that a) for each   the mapping taking   to   is a homeomorphism of   onto itself; b)   for all  ; and c)  . Such a function   is known as an ambient isotopy.)

These two notions of knot equivalence agree exactly about which knots are equivalent: Two knots that are equivalent under the orientation-preserving homeomorphism definition are also equivalent under the ambient isotopy definition, because any orientation-preserving homeomorphisms of   to itself is the final stage of an ambient isotopy starting from the identity. Conversely, two knots equivalent under the ambient isotopy definition are also equivalent under the orientation-preserving homeomorphism definition, because the   (final) stage of the ambient isotopy must be an orientation-preserving homeomorphism carrying one knot to the other.

The basic problem of knot theory, the recognition problem, is determining the equivalence of two knots. Algorithms exist to solve this problem, with the first given by Wolfgang Haken in the late 1960s (Hass 1998). Nonetheless, these algorithms can be extremely time-consuming, and a major issue in the theory is to understand how hard this problem really is (Hass 1998). The special case of recognizing the unknot, called the unknotting problem, is of particular interest (Hoste 2005). In February 2021 Marc Lackenby announced a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi-polynomial time.[2]

Knot diagrams edit

 
Tenfold Knottiness, plate IX, from Peter Guthrie Tait's article "On Knots", 1884

A useful way to visualise and manipulate knots is to project the knot onto a plane—think of the knot casting a shadow on the wall. A small change in the direction of projection will ensure that it is one-to-one except at the double points, called crossings, where the "shadow" of the knot crosses itself once transversely (Rolfsen 1976). At each crossing, to be able to recreate the original knot, the over-strand must be distinguished from the under-strand. This is often done by creating a break in the strand going underneath. The resulting diagram is an immersed plane curve with the additional data of which strand is over and which is under at each crossing. (These diagrams are called knot diagrams when they represent a knot and link diagrams when they represent a link.) Analogously, knotted surfaces in 4-space can be related to immersed surfaces in 3-space.

A reduced diagram is a knot diagram in which there are no reducible crossings (also nugatory or removable crossings), or in which all of the reducible crossings have been removed.[3][4] A petal projection is a type of projection in which, instead of forming double points, all strands of the knot meet at a single crossing point, connected to it by loops forming non-nested "petals".[5]

Reidemeister moves edit

In 1927, working with this diagrammatic form of knots, J. W. Alexander and Garland Baird Briggs, and independently Kurt Reidemeister, demonstrated that two knot diagrams belonging to the same knot can be related by a sequence of three kinds of moves on the diagram, shown below. These operations, now called the Reidemeister moves, are:

  1. Twist and untwist in either direction.
  2. Move one strand completely over another.
  3. Move a strand completely over or under a crossing.
Reidemeister moves
     
Type I Type II
 
Type III

The proof that diagrams of equivalent knots are connected by Reidemeister moves relies on an analysis of what happens under the planar projection of the movement taking one knot to another. The movement can be arranged so that almost all of the time the projection will be a knot diagram, except at finitely many times when an "event" or "catastrophe" occurs, such as when more than two strands cross at a point or multiple strands become tangent at a point. A close inspection will show that complicated events can be eliminated, leaving only the simplest events: (1) a "kink" forming or being straightened out; (2) two strands becoming tangent at a point and passing through; and (3) three strands crossing at a point. These are precisely the Reidemeister moves (Sossinsky 2002, ch. 3) (Lickorish 1997, ch. 1).

Knot invariants edit

 
A 3D print depicting the complement of the figure eight knot
by François Guéritaud, Saul Schleimer, and Henry Segerman

A knot invariant is a "quantity" that is the same for equivalent knots (Adams 2004) (Lickorish 1997) (Rolfsen 1976). For example, if the invariant is computed from a knot diagram, it should give the same value for two knot diagrams representing equivalent knots. An invariant may take the same value on two different knots, so by itself may be incapable of distinguishing all knots. An elementary invariant is tricolorability.

"Classical" knot invariants include the knot group, which is the fundamental group of the knot complement, and the Alexander polynomial, which can be computed from the Alexander invariant, a module constructed from the infinite cyclic cover of the knot complement (Lickorish 1997)(Rolfsen 1976). In the late 20th century, invariants such as "quantum" knot polynomials, Vassiliev invariants and hyperbolic invariants were discovered. These aforementioned invariants are only the tip of the iceberg of modern knot theory.

Knot polynomials edit

A knot polynomial is a knot invariant that is a polynomial. Well-known examples include the Jones and Alexander polynomials. A variant of the Alexander polynomial, the Alexander–Conway polynomial, is a polynomial in the variable z with integer coefficients (Lickorish 1997).

The Alexander–Conway polynomial is actually defined in terms of links, which consist of one or more knots entangled with each other. The concepts explained above for knots, e.g. diagrams and Reidemeister moves, also hold for links.

Consider an oriented link diagram, i.e. one in which every component of the link has a preferred direction indicated by an arrow. For a given crossing of the diagram, let   be the oriented link diagrams resulting from changing the diagram as indicated in the figure:

 

The original diagram might be either   or  , depending on the chosen crossing's configuration. Then the Alexander–Conway polynomial,  , is recursively defined according to the rules:

  •   (where   is any diagram of the unknot)
  •  

The second rule is what is often referred to as a skein relation. To check that these rules give an invariant of an oriented link, one should determine that the polynomial does not change under the three Reidemeister moves. Many important knot polynomials can be defined in this way.

The following is an example of a typical computation using a skein relation. It computes the Alexander–Conway polynomial of the trefoil knot. The yellow patches indicate where the relation is applied.

C( ) = C( ) + z C( )

gives the unknot and the Hopf link. Applying the relation to the Hopf link where indicated,

C( ) = C( ) + z C( )

gives a link deformable to one with 0 crossings (it is actually the unlink of two components) and an unknot. The unlink takes a bit of sneakiness:

C( ) = C( ) + z C( )

which implies that C(unlink of two components) = 0, since the first two polynomials are of the unknot and thus equal.

Putting all this together will show:

 

Since the Alexander–Conway polynomial is a knot invariant, this shows that the trefoil is not equivalent to the unknot. So the trefoil really is "knotted".

Actually, there are two trefoil knots, called the right and left-handed trefoils, which are mirror images of each other (take a diagram of the trefoil given above and change each crossing to the other way to get the mirror image). These are not equivalent to each other, meaning that they are not amphichiral. This was shown by Max Dehn, before the invention of knot polynomials, using group theoretical methods (Dehn 1914). But the Alexander–Conway polynomial of each kind of trefoil will be the same, as can be seen by going through the computation above with the mirror image. The Jones polynomial can in fact distinguish between the left- and right-handed trefoil knots (Lickorish 1997).

Hyperbolic invariants edit

William Thurston proved many knots are hyperbolic knots, meaning that the knot complement (i.e., the set of points of 3-space not on the knot) admits a geometric structure, in particular that of hyperbolic geometry. The hyperbolic structure depends only on the knot so any quantity computed from the hyperbolic structure is then a knot invariant (Adams 2004).

 
The Borromean rings are a link with the property that removing one ring unlinks the others.
 
SnapPea's cusp view: the Borromean rings complement from the perspective of an inhabitant living near the red component.

Geometry lets us visualize what the inside of a knot or link complement looks like by imagining light rays as traveling along the geodesics of the geometry. An example is provided by the picture of the complement of the Borromean rings. The inhabitant of this link complement is viewing the space from near the red component. The balls in the picture are views of horoball neighborhoods of the link. By thickening the link in a standard way, the horoball neighborhoods of the link components are obtained. Even though the boundary of a neighborhood is a torus, when viewed from inside the link complement, it looks like a sphere. Each link component shows up as infinitely many spheres (of one color) as there are infinitely many light rays from the observer to the link component. The fundamental parallelogram (which is indicated in the picture), tiles both vertically and horizontally and shows how to extend the pattern of spheres infinitely.

This pattern, the horoball pattern, is itself a useful invariant. Other hyperbolic invariants include the shape of the fundamental parallelogram, length of shortest geodesic, and volume. Modern knot and link tabulation efforts have utilized these invariants effectively. Fast computers and clever methods of obtaining these invariants make calculating these invariants, in practice, a simple task (Adams, Hildebrand & Weeks 1991).

Higher dimensions edit

A knot in three dimensions can be untied when placed in four-dimensional space. This is done by changing crossings. Suppose one strand is behind another as seen from a chosen point. Lift it into the fourth dimension, so there is no obstacle (the front strand having no component there); then slide it forward, and drop it back, now in front. Analogies for the plane would be lifting a string up off the surface, or removing a dot from inside a circle.

In fact, in four dimensions, any non-intersecting closed loop of one-dimensional string is equivalent to an unknot. First "push" the loop into a three-dimensional subspace, which is always possible, though technical to explain.

Four-dimensional space occurs in classical knot theory, however, and an important topic is the study of slice knots and ribbon knots. A notorious open problem asks whether every slice knot is also ribbon.

Knotting spheres of higher dimension edit

Since a knot can be considered topologically a 1-dimensional sphere, the next generalization is to consider a two-dimensional sphere ( ) embedded in 4-dimensional Euclidean space ( ). Such an embedding is knotted if there is no homeomorphism of   onto itself taking the embedded 2-sphere to the standard "round" embedding of the 2-sphere. Suspended knots and spun knots are two typical families of such 2-sphere knots.

The mathematical technique called "general position" implies that for a given n-sphere in m-dimensional Euclidean space, if m is large enough (depending on n), the sphere should be unknotted. In general, piecewise-linear n-spheres form knots only in (n + 2)-dimensional space (Zeeman 1963), although this is no longer a requirement for smoothly knotted spheres. In fact, there are smoothly knotted  -spheres in 6k-dimensional space; e.g., there is a smoothly knotted 3-sphere in   (Haefliger 1962) (Levine 1965). Thus the codimension of a smooth knot can be arbitrarily large when not fixing the dimension of the knotted sphere; however, any smooth k-sphere embedded in   with   is unknotted. The notion of a knot has further generalisations in mathematics, see: Knot (mathematics), isotopy classification of embeddings.

Every knot in the n-sphere   is the link of a real-algebraic set with isolated singularity in   (Akbulut & King 1981).

An n-knot is a single   embedded in  . An n-link consists of k-copies of   embedded in  , where k is a natural number. Both the   and the   cases are well studied, and so is the   case.[6][7]

Adding knots edit

 
Adding two knots

Two knots can be added by cutting both knots and joining the pairs of ends. The operation is called the knot sum, or sometimes the connected sum or composition of two knots. This can be formally defined as follows (Adams 2004): consider a planar projection of each knot and suppose these projections are disjoint. Find a rectangle in the plane where one pair of opposite sides are arcs along each knot while the rest of the rectangle is disjoint from the knots. Form a new knot by deleting the first pair of opposite sides and adjoining the other pair of opposite sides. The resulting knot is a sum of the original knots. Depending on how this is done, two different knots (but no more) may result. This ambiguity in the sum can be eliminated regarding the knots as oriented, i.e. having a preferred direction of travel along the knot, and requiring the arcs of the knots in the sum are oriented consistently with the oriented boundary of the rectangle.

The knot sum of oriented knots is commutative and associative. A knot is prime if it is non-trivial and cannot be written as the knot sum of two non-trivial knots. A knot that can be written as such a sum is composite. There is a prime decomposition for knots, analogous to prime and composite numbers (Schubert 1949). For oriented knots, this decomposition is also unique. Higher-dimensional knots can also be added but there are some differences. While you cannot form the unknot in three dimensions by adding two non-trivial knots, you can in higher dimensions, at least when one considers smooth knots in codimension at least 3.

Knots can also be constructed using the circuit topology approach. This is done by combining basic units called soft contacts using five operations (Parallel, Series, Cross, Concerted, and Sub).[8][9] The approach is applicable to open chains as well and can also be extended to include the so-called hard contacts.

Tabulating knots edit

 
A table of prime knots up to seven crossings. The knots are labeled with Alexander–Briggs notation

Traditionally, knots have been catalogued in terms of crossing number. Knot tables generally include only prime knots, and only one entry for a knot and its mirror image (even if they are different) (Hoste, Thistlethwaite & Weeks 1998). The number of nontrivial knots of a given crossing number increases rapidly, making tabulation computationally difficult (Hoste 2005, p. 20). Tabulation efforts have succeeded in enumerating over 6 billion knots and links (Hoste 2005, p. 28). The sequence of the number of prime knots of a given crossing number, up to crossing number 16, is 0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 7, 21, 49, 165, 552, 2176, 9988, 46972, 253293, 1388705... (sequence A002863 in the OEIS). While exponential upper and lower bounds for this sequence are known, it has not been proven that this sequence is strictly increasing (Adams 2004).

The first knot tables by Tait, Little, and Kirkman used knot diagrams, although Tait also used a precursor to the Dowker notation. Different notations have been invented for knots which allow more efficient tabulation (Hoste 2005).

The early tables attempted to list all knots of at most 10 crossings, and all alternating knots of 11 crossings (Hoste, Thistlethwaite & Weeks 1998). The development of knot theory due to Alexander, Reidemeister, Seifert, and others eased the task of verification and tables of knots up to and including 9 crossings were published by Alexander–Briggs and Reidemeister in the late 1920s.

The first major verification of this work was done in the 1960s by John Horton Conway, who not only developed a new notation but also the Alexander–Conway polynomial (Conway 1970) (Doll & Hoste 1991). This verified the list of knots of at most 11 crossings and a new list of links up to 10 crossings. Conway found a number of omissions but only one duplication in the Tait–Little tables; however he missed the duplicates called the Perko pair, which would only be noticed in 1974 by Kenneth Perko (Perko 1974). This famous error would propagate when Dale Rolfsen added a knot table in his influential text, based on Conway's work. Conway's 1970 paper on knot theory also contains a typographical duplication on its non-alternating 11-crossing knots page and omits 4 examples — 2 previously listed in D. Lombardero's 1968 Princeton senior thesis and 2 more subsequently discovered by Alain Caudron. [see Perko (1982), Primality of certain knots, Topology Proceedings] Less famous is the duplicate in his 10 crossing link table: 2.-2.-20.20 is the mirror of 8*-20:-20. [See Perko (2016), Historical highlights of non-cyclic knot theory, J. Knot Theory Ramifications].

In the late 1990s Hoste, Thistlethwaite, and Weeks tabulated all the knots through 16 crossings (Hoste, Thistlethwaite & Weeks 1998). In 2003 Rankin, Flint, and Schermann, tabulated the alternating knots through 22 crossings (Hoste 2005). In 2020 Burton tabulated all prime knots with up to 19 crossings (Burton 2020).

Alexander–Briggs notation edit

This is the most traditional notation, due to the 1927 paper of James W. Alexander and Garland B. Briggs and later extended by Dale Rolfsen in his knot table (see image above and List of prime knots). The notation simply organizes knots by their crossing number. One writes the crossing number with a subscript to denote its order amongst all knots with that crossing number. This order is arbitrary and so has no special significance (though in each number of crossings the twist knot comes after the torus knot). Links are written by the crossing number with a superscript to denote the number of components and a subscript to denote its order within the links with the same number of components and crossings. Thus the trefoil knot is notated 31 and the Hopf link is 22
1
. Alexander–Briggs names in the range 10162 to 10166 are ambiguous, due to the discovery of the Perko pair in Charles Newton Little's original and subsequent knot tables, and differences in approach to correcting this error in knot tables and other publications created after this point.[10]

Dowker–Thistlethwaite notation edit

 
A knot diagram with crossings labelled for a Dowker sequence

The Dowker–Thistlethwaite notation, also called the Dowker notation or code, for a knot is a finite sequence of even integers. The numbers are generated by following the knot and marking the crossings with consecutive integers. Since each crossing is visited twice, this creates a pairing of even integers with odd integers. An appropriate sign is given to indicate over and undercrossing. For example, in this figure the knot diagram has crossings labelled with the pairs (1,6) (3,−12) (5,2) (7,8) (9,−4) and (11,−10). The Dowker–Thistlethwaite notation for this labelling is the sequence: 6, −12, 2, 8, −4, −10. A knot diagram has more than one possible Dowker notation, and there is a well-understood ambiguity when reconstructing a knot from a Dowker–Thistlethwaite notation.

Conway notation edit

The Conway notation for knots and links, named after John Horton Conway, is based on the theory of tangles (Conway 1970). The advantage of this notation is that it reflects some properties of the knot or link.

The notation describes how to construct a particular link diagram of the link. Start with a basic polyhedron, a 4-valent connected planar graph with no digon regions. Such a polyhedron is denoted first by the number of vertices then a number of asterisks which determine the polyhedron's position on a list of basic polyhedra. For example, 10** denotes the second 10-vertex polyhedron on Conway's list.

Each vertex then has an algebraic tangle substituted into it (each vertex is oriented so there is no arbitrary choice in substitution). Each such tangle has a notation consisting of numbers and + or − signs.

An example is 1*2 −3 2. The 1* denotes the only 1-vertex basic polyhedron. The 2 −3 2 is a sequence describing the continued fraction associated to a rational tangle. One inserts this tangle at the vertex of the basic polyhedron 1*.

A more complicated example is 8*3.1.2 0.1.1.1.1.1 Here again 8* refers to a basic polyhedron with 8 vertices. The periods separate the notation for each tangle.

Any link admits such a description, and it is clear this is a very compact notation even for very large crossing number. There are some further shorthands usually used. The last example is usually written 8*3:2 0, where the ones are omitted and kept the number of dots excepting the dots at the end. For an algebraic knot such as in the first example, 1* is often omitted.

Conway's pioneering paper on the subject lists up to 10-vertex basic polyhedra of which he uses to tabulate links, which have become standard for those links. For a further listing of higher vertex polyhedra, there are nonstandard choices available.

Gauss code edit

Gauss code, similar to the Dowker–Thistlethwaite notation, represents a knot with a sequence of integers. However, rather than every crossing being represented by two different numbers, crossings are labeled with only one number. When the crossing is an overcrossing, a positive number is listed. At an undercrossing, a negative number. For example, the trefoil knot in Gauss code can be given as: 1,−2,3,−1,2,−3

Gauss code is limited in its ability to identify knots. This problem is partially addressed with by the extended Gauss code.

See also edit

References edit

Sources edit

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  • Sossinsky, Alexei (2002), Knots, mathematics with a twist, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-00944-8
  • Turaev, Vladimir G. (2016). Quantum Invariants of Knots and 3-Manifolds. doi:10.1515/9783110435221. ISBN 978-3-11-043522-1. S2CID 118682559.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. (2013). "Reduced Knot Diagram". MathWorld. Wolfram. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. (2013a). "Reducible Crossing". MathWorld. Wolfram. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  • Witten, Edward (1989), "Quantum field theory and the Jones polynomial", Comm. Math. Phys., 121 (3): 351–399, Bibcode:1989CMaPh.121..351W, doi:10.1007/BF01217730, S2CID 14951363
  • Zeeman, Erik C. (1963), "Unknotting combinatorial balls", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 78 (3): 501–526, doi:10.2307/1970538, JSTOR 1970538

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ As first sketched using the theory of Haken manifolds by Haken (1962). For a more recent survey, see Hass (1998)
  2. ^ Marc Lackenby announces a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi-polynomial time, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, 2021-02-03, retrieved 2021-02-03
  3. ^ Weisstein 2013.
  4. ^ Weisstein 2013a.
  5. ^ Adams et al. 2015.
  6. ^ Levine, J.; Orr, K (2000), "A survey of applications of surgery to knot and link theory", Surveys on Surgery Theory: Papers Dedicated to C.T.C. Wall, Annals of mathematics studies, vol. 1, Princeton University Press, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.64.4359, ISBN 978-0691049380 — An introductory article to high dimensional knots and links for the advanced readers
  7. ^ Ogasa, Eiji (2013), Introduction to high dimensional knots, arXiv:1304.6053, Bibcode:2013arXiv1304.6053O — An introductory article to high dimensional knots and links for beginners
  8. ^ Golovnev, Anatoly; Mashaghi, Alireza (7 December 2021). "Circuit Topology for Bottom-Up Engineering of Molecular Knots". Symmetry. 13 (12): 2353. arXiv:2106.03925. Bibcode:2021Symm...13.2353G. doi:10.3390/sym13122353.
  9. ^ Flapan, Erica; Mashaghi, Alireza; Wong, Helen (1 June 2023). "A tile model of circuit topology for self-entangled biopolymers". Scientific Reports. 13 (1): 8889. Bibcode:2023NatSR..13.8889F. doi:10.1038/s41598-023-35771-8. PMC 10235088. PMID 37264056.
  10. ^ "The Revenge of the Perko Pair", RichardElwes.co.uk. Accessed February 2016. Richard Elwes points out a common mistake in describing the Perko pair.

Further reading edit

Introductory textbooks edit

There are a number of introductions to knot theory. A classical introduction for graduate students or advanced undergraduates is (Rolfsen 1976). Other good texts from the references are (Adams 2004) and (Lickorish 1997). Adams is informal and accessible for the most part to high schoolers. Lickorish is a rigorous introduction for graduate students, covering a nice mix of classical and modern topics. (Cromwell 2004) is suitable for undergraduates who know point-set topology; knowledge of algebraic topology is not required.

Surveys edit

  • Menasco, William W.; Thistlethwaite, Morwen, eds. (2005), Handbook of Knot Theory, Elsevier, ISBN 978-0-444-51452-3
    • Menasco and Thistlethwaite's handbook surveys a mix of topics relevant to current research trends in a manner accessible to advanced undergraduates but of interest to professional researchers.
  • Livio, Mario (2009), "Ch. 8: Unreasonable Effectiveness?", Is God a Mathematician?, Simon & Schuster, pp. 203–218, ISBN 978-0-7432-9405-8

External links edit

  • "Mathematics and Knots" This is an online version of an exhibition developed for the 1989 Royal Society "PopMath RoadShow". Its aim was to use knots to present methods of mathematics to the general public.

History edit

  • Thomson, Sir William (1867), "On Vortex Atoms", Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, VI: 94–105
  • Silliman, Robert H. (December 1963), "William Thomson: Smoke Rings and Nineteenth-Century Atomism", Isis, 54 (4): 461–474, doi:10.1086/349764, JSTOR 228151, S2CID 144988108
  • Movie of a modern recreation of Tait's smoke ring experiment
  • History of knot theory (on the home page of Andrew Ranicki)

Knot tables and software edit

  • KnotInfo: Table of Knot Invariants and Knot Theory Resources
  • The Knot Atlas — detailed info on individual knots in knot tables
  • KnotPlot — software to investigate geometric properties of knots
  • Knotscape — software to create images of knots
  • Knoutilus — online database and image generator of knots
  • KnotData.html — Wolfram Mathematica function for investigating knots
  • Regina — software for low-dimensional topology with native support for knots and links. Tables of prime knots with up to 19 crossings

knot, theory, topology, knot, theory, study, mathematical, knots, while, inspired, knots, which, appear, daily, life, such, those, shoelaces, rope, mathematical, knot, differs, that, ends, joined, cannot, undone, simplest, knot, being, ring, unknot, mathematic. In topology knot theory is the study of mathematical knots While inspired by knots which appear in daily life such as those in shoelaces and rope a mathematical knot differs in that the ends are joined so it cannot be undone the simplest knot being a ring or unknot In mathematical language a knot is an embedding of a circle in 3 dimensional Euclidean space R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 Two mathematical knots are equivalent if one can be transformed into the other via a deformation of R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 upon itself known as an ambient isotopy these transformations correspond to manipulations of a knotted string that do not involve cutting it or passing it through itself Examples of different knots including the trivial knot top left and the trefoil knot below it A knot diagram of the trefoil knot the simplest non trivial knot Knots can be described in various ways Using different description methods there may be more than one description of the same knot For example a common method of describing a knot is a planar diagram called a knot diagram in which any knot can be drawn in many different ways Therefore a fundamental problem in knot theory is determining when two descriptions represent the same knot A complete algorithmic solution to this problem exists which has unknown complexity 1 In practice knots are often distinguished using a knot invariant a quantity which is the same when computed from different descriptions of a knot Important invariants include knot polynomials knot groups and hyperbolic invariants The original motivation for the founders of knot theory was to create a table of knots and links which are knots of several components entangled with each other More than six billion knots and links have been tabulated since the beginnings of knot theory in the 19th century To gain further insight mathematicians have generalized the knot concept in several ways Knots can be considered in other three dimensional spaces and objects other than circles can be used see knot mathematics For example a higher dimensional knot is an n dimensional sphere embedded in n 2 dimensional Euclidean space Contents 1 History 2 Knot equivalence 3 Knot diagrams 3 1 Reidemeister moves 4 Knot invariants 4 1 Knot polynomials 4 2 Hyperbolic invariants 5 Higher dimensions 5 1 Knotting spheres of higher dimension 6 Adding knots 7 Tabulating knots 7 1 Alexander Briggs notation 7 2 Dowker Thistlethwaite notation 7 3 Conway notation 7 4 Gauss code 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Sources 9 2 Footnotes 10 Further reading 10 1 Introductory textbooks 10 2 Surveys 11 External links 11 1 History 11 2 Knot tables and softwareHistory editMain article History of knot theory nbsp Intricate Celtic knotwork in the 1200 year old Book of Kells Archaeologists have discovered that knot tying dates back to prehistoric times Besides their uses such as recording information and tying objects together knots have interested humans for their aesthetics and spiritual symbolism Knots appear in various forms of Chinese artwork dating from several centuries BC see Chinese knotting The endless knot appears in Tibetan Buddhism while the Borromean rings have made repeated appearances in different cultures often representing strength in unity The Celtic monks who created the Book of Kells lavished entire pages with intricate Celtic knotwork nbsp The first knot tabulator Peter Guthrie Tait A mathematical theory of knots was first developed in 1771 by Alexandre Theophile Vandermonde who explicitly noted the importance of topological features when discussing the properties of knots related to the geometry of position Mathematical studies of knots began in the 19th century with Carl Friedrich Gauss who defined the linking integral Silver 2006 In the 1860s Lord Kelvin s theory that atoms were knots in the aether led to Peter Guthrie Tait s creation of the first knot tables for complete classification Tait in 1885 published a table of knots with up to ten crossings and what came to be known as the Tait conjectures This record motivated the early knot theorists but knot theory eventually became part of the emerging subject of topology These topologists in the early part of the 20th century Max Dehn J W Alexander and others studied knots from the point of view of the knot group and invariants from homology theory such as the Alexander polynomial This would be the main approach to knot theory until a series of breakthroughs transformed the subject In the late 1970s William Thurston introduced hyperbolic geometry into the study of knots with the hyperbolization theorem Many knots were shown to be hyperbolic knots enabling the use of geometry in defining new powerful knot invariants The discovery of the Jones polynomial by Vaughan Jones in 1984 Sossinsky 2002 pp 71 89 and subsequent contributions from Edward Witten Maxim Kontsevich and others revealed deep connections between knot theory and mathematical methods in statistical mechanics and quantum field theory A plethora of knot invariants have been invented since then utilizing sophisticated tools such as quantum groups and Floer homology In the last several decades of the 20th century scientists became interested in studying physical knots in order to understand knotting phenomena in DNA and other polymers Knot theory can be used to determine if a molecule is chiral has a handedness or not Simon 1986 Tangles strings with both ends fixed in place have been effectively used in studying the action of topoisomerase on DNA Flapan 2000 Knot theory may be crucial in the construction of quantum computers through the model of topological quantum computation Collins 2006 Knot equivalence edit nbsp nbsp On the left the unknot and a knot equivalent to it It can be more difficult to determine whether complex knots such as the one on the right are equivalent to the unknot A knot is created by beginning with a one dimensional line segment wrapping it around itself arbitrarily and then fusing its two free ends together to form a closed loop Adams 2004 Sossinsky 2002 Simply we can say a knot K displaystyle K nbsp is a simple closed curve see Curve that is a nearly injective and continuous function K 0 1 R 3 displaystyle K colon 0 1 to mathbb R 3 nbsp with the only non injectivity being K 0 K 1 displaystyle K 0 K 1 nbsp Topologists consider knots and other entanglements such as links and braids to be equivalent if the knot can be pushed about smoothly without intersecting itself to coincide with another knot The idea of knot equivalence is to give a precise definition of when two knots should be considered the same even when positioned quite differently in space A formal mathematical definition is that two knots K 1 K 2 displaystyle K 1 K 2 nbsp are equivalent if there is an orientation preserving homeomorphism h R 3 R 3 displaystyle h colon mathbb R 3 to mathbb R 3 nbsp with h K 1 K 2 displaystyle h K 1 K 2 nbsp What this definition of knot equivalence means is that two knots are equivalent when there is a continuous family of homeomorphisms h t R 3 R 3 f o r 0 t 1 displaystyle h t mathbb R 3 rightarrow mathbb R 3 mathrm for 0 leq t leq 1 nbsp of space onto itself such that the last one of them carries the first knot onto the second knot In detail Two knots K 1 displaystyle K 1 nbsp and K 2 displaystyle K 2 nbsp are equivalent if there exists a continuous mapping H R 3 0 1 R 3 displaystyle H mathbb R 3 times 0 1 rightarrow mathbb R 3 nbsp such that a for each t 0 1 displaystyle t in 0 1 nbsp the mapping taking x R 3 displaystyle x in mathbb R 3 nbsp to H x t R 3 displaystyle H x t in mathbb R 3 nbsp is a homeomorphism of R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 nbsp onto itself b H x 0 x displaystyle H x 0 x nbsp for all x R 3 displaystyle x in mathbb R 3 nbsp and c H K 1 1 K 2 displaystyle H K 1 1 K 2 nbsp Such a function H displaystyle H nbsp is known as an ambient isotopy These two notions of knot equivalence agree exactly about which knots are equivalent Two knots that are equivalent under the orientation preserving homeomorphism definition are also equivalent under the ambient isotopy definition because any orientation preserving homeomorphisms of R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 nbsp to itself is the final stage of an ambient isotopy starting from the identity Conversely two knots equivalent under the ambient isotopy definition are also equivalent under the orientation preserving homeomorphism definition because the t 1 displaystyle t 1 nbsp final stage of the ambient isotopy must be an orientation preserving homeomorphism carrying one knot to the other The basic problem of knot theory the recognition problem is determining the equivalence of two knots Algorithms exist to solve this problem with the first given by Wolfgang Haken in the late 1960s Hass 1998 Nonetheless these algorithms can be extremely time consuming and a major issue in the theory is to understand how hard this problem really is Hass 1998 The special case of recognizing the unknot called the unknotting problem is of particular interest Hoste 2005 In February 2021 Marc Lackenby announced a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi polynomial time 2 Knot diagrams edit nbsp Tenfold Knottiness plate IX from Peter Guthrie Tait s article On Knots 1884 A useful way to visualise and manipulate knots is to project the knot onto a plane think of the knot casting a shadow on the wall A small change in the direction of projection will ensure that it is one to one except at the double points called crossings where the shadow of the knot crosses itself once transversely Rolfsen 1976 At each crossing to be able to recreate the original knot the over strand must be distinguished from the under strand This is often done by creating a break in the strand going underneath The resulting diagram is an immersed plane curve with the additional data of which strand is over and which is under at each crossing These diagrams are called knot diagrams when they represent a knot and link diagrams when they represent a link Analogously knotted surfaces in 4 space can be related to immersed surfaces in 3 space A reduced diagram is a knot diagram in which there are no reducible crossings also nugatory or removable crossings or in which all of the reducible crossings have been removed 3 4 A petal projection is a type of projection in which instead of forming double points all strands of the knot meet at a single crossing point connected to it by loops forming non nested petals 5 Reidemeister moves edit Main article Reidemeister move In 1927 working with this diagrammatic form of knots J W Alexander and Garland Baird Briggs and independently Kurt Reidemeister demonstrated that two knot diagrams belonging to the same knot can be related by a sequence of three kinds of moves on the diagram shown below These operations now called the Reidemeister moves are Twist and untwist in either direction Move one strand completely over another Move a strand completely over or under a crossing Reidemeister moves nbsp nbsp nbsp Type I Type II nbsp Type III The proof that diagrams of equivalent knots are connected by Reidemeister moves relies on an analysis of what happens under the planar projection of the movement taking one knot to another The movement can be arranged so that almost all of the time the projection will be a knot diagram except at finitely many times when an event or catastrophe occurs such as when more than two strands cross at a point or multiple strands become tangent at a point A close inspection will show that complicated events can be eliminated leaving only the simplest events 1 a kink forming or being straightened out 2 two strands becoming tangent at a point and passing through and 3 three strands crossing at a point These are precisely the Reidemeister moves Sossinsky 2002 ch 3 Lickorish 1997 ch 1 Knot invariants edit nbsp A 3D print depicting the complement of the figure eight knotby Francois Gueritaud Saul Schleimer and Henry Segerman Main article Knot invariant A knot invariant is a quantity that is the same for equivalent knots Adams 2004 Lickorish 1997 Rolfsen 1976 For example if the invariant is computed from a knot diagram it should give the same value for two knot diagrams representing equivalent knots An invariant may take the same value on two different knots so by itself may be incapable of distinguishing all knots An elementary invariant is tricolorability Classical knot invariants include the knot group which is the fundamental group of the knot complement and the Alexander polynomial which can be computed from the Alexander invariant a module constructed from the infinite cyclic cover of the knot complement Lickorish 1997 Rolfsen 1976 In the late 20th century invariants such as quantum knot polynomials Vassiliev invariants and hyperbolic invariants were discovered These aforementioned invariants are only the tip of the iceberg of modern knot theory Knot polynomials edit Main article Knot polynomial A knot polynomial is a knot invariant that is a polynomial Well known examples include the Jones and Alexander polynomials A variant of the Alexander polynomial the Alexander Conway polynomial is a polynomial in the variable z with integer coefficients Lickorish 1997 The Alexander Conway polynomial is actually defined in terms of links which consist of one or more knots entangled with each other The concepts explained above for knots e g diagrams and Reidemeister moves also hold for links Consider an oriented link diagram i e one in which every component of the link has a preferred direction indicated by an arrow For a given crossing of the diagram let L L L 0 displaystyle L L L 0 nbsp be the oriented link diagrams resulting from changing the diagram as indicated in the figure nbsp The original diagram might be either L displaystyle L nbsp or L displaystyle L nbsp depending on the chosen crossing s configuration Then the Alexander Conway polynomial C z displaystyle C z nbsp is recursively defined according to the rules C O 1 displaystyle C O 1 nbsp where O displaystyle O nbsp is any diagram of the unknot C L C L z C L 0 displaystyle C L C L zC L 0 nbsp The second rule is what is often referred to as a skein relation To check that these rules give an invariant of an oriented link one should determine that the polynomial does not change under the three Reidemeister moves Many important knot polynomials can be defined in this way The following is an example of a typical computation using a skein relation It computes the Alexander Conway polynomial of the trefoil knot The yellow patches indicate where the relation is applied C nbsp C nbsp z C nbsp gives the unknot and the Hopf link Applying the relation to the Hopf link where indicated C nbsp C nbsp z C nbsp gives a link deformable to one with 0 crossings it is actually the unlink of two components and an unknot The unlink takes a bit of sneakiness C nbsp C nbsp z C nbsp which implies that C unlink of two components 0 since the first two polynomials are of the unknot and thus equal Putting all this together will show C t r e f o i l 1 z 0 z 1 z 2 displaystyle C mathrm trefoil 1 z 0 z 1 z 2 nbsp Since the Alexander Conway polynomial is a knot invariant this shows that the trefoil is not equivalent to the unknot So the trefoil really is knotted nbsp The left handed trefoil knot nbsp The right handed trefoil knot Actually there are two trefoil knots called the right and left handed trefoils which are mirror images of each other take a diagram of the trefoil given above and change each crossing to the other way to get the mirror image These are not equivalent to each other meaning that they are not amphichiral This was shown by Max Dehn before the invention of knot polynomials using group theoretical methods Dehn 1914 But the Alexander Conway polynomial of each kind of trefoil will be the same as can be seen by going through the computation above with the mirror image The Jones polynomial can in fact distinguish between the left and right handed trefoil knots Lickorish 1997 Hyperbolic invariants edit William Thurston proved many knots are hyperbolic knots meaning that the knot complement i e the set of points of 3 space not on the knot admits a geometric structure in particular that of hyperbolic geometry The hyperbolic structure depends only on the knot so any quantity computed from the hyperbolic structure is then a knot invariant Adams 2004 nbsp The Borromean rings are a link with the property that removing one ring unlinks the others nbsp SnapPea s cusp view the Borromean rings complement from the perspective of an inhabitant living near the red component Geometry lets us visualize what the inside of a knot or link complement looks like by imagining light rays as traveling along the geodesics of the geometry An example is provided by the picture of the complement of the Borromean rings The inhabitant of this link complement is viewing the space from near the red component The balls in the picture are views of horoball neighborhoods of the link By thickening the link in a standard way the horoball neighborhoods of the link components are obtained Even though the boundary of a neighborhood is a torus when viewed from inside the link complement it looks like a sphere Each link component shows up as infinitely many spheres of one color as there are infinitely many light rays from the observer to the link component The fundamental parallelogram which is indicated in the picture tiles both vertically and horizontally and shows how to extend the pattern of spheres infinitely This pattern the horoball pattern is itself a useful invariant Other hyperbolic invariants include the shape of the fundamental parallelogram length of shortest geodesic and volume Modern knot and link tabulation efforts have utilized these invariants effectively Fast computers and clever methods of obtaining these invariants make calculating these invariants in practice a simple task Adams Hildebrand amp Weeks 1991 Higher dimensions editA knot in three dimensions can be untied when placed in four dimensional space This is done by changing crossings Suppose one strand is behind another as seen from a chosen point Lift it into the fourth dimension so there is no obstacle the front strand having no component there then slide it forward and drop it back now in front Analogies for the plane would be lifting a string up off the surface or removing a dot from inside a circle In fact in four dimensions any non intersecting closed loop of one dimensional string is equivalent to an unknot First push the loop into a three dimensional subspace which is always possible though technical to explain Four dimensional space occurs in classical knot theory however and an important topic is the study of slice knots and ribbon knots A notorious open problem asks whether every slice knot is also ribbon Knotting spheres of higher dimension edit Since a knot can be considered topologically a 1 dimensional sphere the next generalization is to consider a two dimensional sphere S 2 displaystyle mathbb S 2 nbsp embedded in 4 dimensional Euclidean space R 4 displaystyle mathbb R 4 nbsp Such an embedding is knotted if there is no homeomorphism of R 4 displaystyle mathbb R 4 nbsp onto itself taking the embedded 2 sphere to the standard round embedding of the 2 sphere Suspended knots and spun knots are two typical families of such 2 sphere knots The mathematical technique called general position implies that for a given n sphere in m dimensional Euclidean space if m is large enough depending on n the sphere should be unknotted In general piecewise linear n spheres form knots only in n 2 dimensional space Zeeman 1963 although this is no longer a requirement for smoothly knotted spheres In fact there are smoothly knotted 4 k 1 displaystyle 4k 1 nbsp spheres in 6k dimensional space e g there is a smoothly knotted 3 sphere in R 6 displaystyle mathbb R 6 nbsp Haefliger 1962 Levine 1965 Thus the codimension of a smooth knot can be arbitrarily large when not fixing the dimension of the knotted sphere however any smooth k sphere embedded in R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp with 2 n 3 k 3 gt 0 displaystyle 2n 3k 3 gt 0 nbsp is unknotted The notion of a knot has further generalisations in mathematics see Knot mathematics isotopy classification of embeddings Every knot in the n sphere S n displaystyle mathbb S n nbsp is the link of a real algebraic set with isolated singularity in R n 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 nbsp Akbulut amp King 1981 An n knot is a single S n displaystyle mathbb S n nbsp embedded in R m displaystyle mathbb R m nbsp An n link consists of k copies of S n displaystyle mathbb S n nbsp embedded in R m displaystyle mathbb R m nbsp where k is a natural number Both the m n 2 displaystyle m n 2 nbsp and the m gt n 2 displaystyle m gt n 2 nbsp cases are well studied and so is the n gt 1 displaystyle n gt 1 nbsp case 6 7 Adding knots editMain article Knot sum nbsp Adding two knots Two knots can be added by cutting both knots and joining the pairs of ends The operation is called the knot sum or sometimes the connected sum or composition of two knots This can be formally defined as follows Adams 2004 consider a planar projection of each knot and suppose these projections are disjoint Find a rectangle in the plane where one pair of opposite sides are arcs along each knot while the rest of the rectangle is disjoint from the knots Form a new knot by deleting the first pair of opposite sides and adjoining the other pair of opposite sides The resulting knot is a sum of the original knots Depending on how this is done two different knots but no more may result This ambiguity in the sum can be eliminated regarding the knots as oriented i e having a preferred direction of travel along the knot and requiring the arcs of the knots in the sum are oriented consistently with the oriented boundary of the rectangle The knot sum of oriented knots is commutative and associative A knot is prime if it is non trivial and cannot be written as the knot sum of two non trivial knots A knot that can be written as such a sum is composite There is a prime decomposition for knots analogous to prime and composite numbers Schubert 1949 For oriented knots this decomposition is also unique Higher dimensional knots can also be added but there are some differences While you cannot form the unknot in three dimensions by adding two non trivial knots you can in higher dimensions at least when one considers smooth knots in codimension at least 3 Knots can also be constructed using the circuit topology approach This is done by combining basic units called soft contacts using five operations Parallel Series Cross Concerted and Sub 8 9 The approach is applicable to open chains as well and can also be extended to include the so called hard contacts Tabulating knots editSee also List of prime knots and Knot tabulation nbsp A table of prime knots up to seven crossings The knots are labeled with Alexander Briggs notation Traditionally knots have been catalogued in terms of crossing number Knot tables generally include only prime knots and only one entry for a knot and its mirror image even if they are different Hoste Thistlethwaite amp Weeks 1998 The number of nontrivial knots of a given crossing number increases rapidly making tabulation computationally difficult Hoste 2005 p 20 Tabulation efforts have succeeded in enumerating over 6 billion knots and links Hoste 2005 p 28 The sequence of the number of prime knots of a given crossing number up to crossing number 16 is 0 0 1 1 2 3 7 21 49 165 552 2176 9988 46972 253293 1388 705 sequence A002863 in the OEIS While exponential upper and lower bounds for this sequence are known it has not been proven that this sequence is strictly increasing Adams 2004 The first knot tables by Tait Little and Kirkman used knot diagrams although Tait also used a precursor to the Dowker notation Different notations have been invented for knots which allow more efficient tabulation Hoste 2005 The early tables attempted to list all knots of at most 10 crossings and all alternating knots of 11 crossings Hoste Thistlethwaite amp Weeks 1998 The development of knot theory due to Alexander Reidemeister Seifert and others eased the task of verification and tables of knots up to and including 9 crossings were published by Alexander Briggs and Reidemeister in the late 1920s The first major verification of this work was done in the 1960s by John Horton Conway who not only developed a new notation but also the Alexander Conway polynomial Conway 1970 Doll amp Hoste 1991 This verified the list of knots of at most 11 crossings and a new list of links up to 10 crossings Conway found a number of omissions but only one duplication in the Tait Little tables however he missed the duplicates called the Perko pair which would only be noticed in 1974 by Kenneth Perko Perko 1974 This famous error would propagate when Dale Rolfsen added a knot table in his influential text based on Conway s work Conway s 1970 paper on knot theory also contains a typographical duplication on its non alternating 11 crossing knots page and omits 4 examples 2 previously listed in D Lombardero s 1968 Princeton senior thesis and 2 more subsequently discovered by Alain Caudron see Perko 1982 Primality of certain knots Topology Proceedings Less famous is the duplicate in his 10 crossing link table 2 2 20 20 is the mirror of 8 20 20 See Perko 2016 Historical highlights of non cyclic knot theory J Knot Theory Ramifications In the late 1990s Hoste Thistlethwaite and Weeks tabulated all the knots through 16 crossings Hoste Thistlethwaite amp Weeks 1998 In 2003 Rankin Flint and Schermann tabulated the alternating knots through 22 crossings Hoste 2005 In 2020 Burton tabulated all prime knots with up to 19 crossings Burton 2020 Alexander Briggs notation edit This is the most traditional notation due to the 1927 paper of James W Alexander and Garland B Briggs and later extended by Dale Rolfsen in his knot table see image above and List of prime knots The notation simply organizes knots by their crossing number One writes the crossing number with a subscript to denote its order amongst all knots with that crossing number This order is arbitrary and so has no special significance though in each number of crossings the twist knot comes after the torus knot Links are written by the crossing number with a superscript to denote the number of components and a subscript to denote its order within the links with the same number of components and crossings Thus the trefoil knot is notated 31 and the Hopf link is 221 Alexander Briggs names in the range 10162 to 10166 are ambiguous due to the discovery of the Perko pair in Charles Newton Little s original and subsequent knot tables and differences in approach to correcting this error in knot tables and other publications created after this point 10 Dowker Thistlethwaite notation edit Main article Dowker Thistlethwaite notation nbsp A knot diagram with crossings labelled for a Dowker sequence The Dowker Thistlethwaite notation also called the Dowker notation or code for a knot is a finite sequence of even integers The numbers are generated by following the knot and marking the crossings with consecutive integers Since each crossing is visited twice this creates a pairing of even integers with odd integers An appropriate sign is given to indicate over and undercrossing For example in this figure the knot diagram has crossings labelled with the pairs 1 6 3 12 5 2 7 8 9 4 and 11 10 The Dowker Thistlethwaite notation for this labelling is the sequence 6 12 2 8 4 10 A knot diagram has more than one possible Dowker notation and there is a well understood ambiguity when reconstructing a knot from a Dowker Thistlethwaite notation Conway notation edit Main article Conway notation knot theory The Conway notation for knots and links named after John Horton Conway is based on the theory of tangles Conway 1970 The advantage of this notation is that it reflects some properties of the knot or link The notation describes how to construct a particular link diagram of the link Start with a basic polyhedron a 4 valent connected planar graph with no digon regions Such a polyhedron is denoted first by the number of vertices then a number of asterisks which determine the polyhedron s position on a list of basic polyhedra For example 10 denotes the second 10 vertex polyhedron on Conway s list Each vertex then has an algebraic tangle substituted into it each vertex is oriented so there is no arbitrary choice in substitution Each such tangle has a notation consisting of numbers and or signs An example is 1 2 3 2 The 1 denotes the only 1 vertex basic polyhedron The 2 3 2 is a sequence describing the continued fraction associated to a rational tangle One inserts this tangle at the vertex of the basic polyhedron 1 A more complicated example is 8 3 1 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 Here again 8 refers to a basic polyhedron with 8 vertices The periods separate the notation for each tangle Any link admits such a description and it is clear this is a very compact notation even for very large crossing number There are some further shorthands usually used The last example is usually written 8 3 2 0 where the ones are omitted and kept the number of dots excepting the dots at the end For an algebraic knot such as in the first example 1 is often omitted Conway s pioneering paper on the subject lists up to 10 vertex basic polyhedra of which he uses to tabulate links which have become standard for those links For a further listing of higher vertex polyhedra there are nonstandard choices available Gauss code edit Main article Gauss code Gauss code similar to the Dowker Thistlethwaite notation represents a knot with a sequence of integers However rather than every crossing being represented by two different numbers crossings are labeled with only one number When the crossing is an overcrossing a positive number is listed At an undercrossing a negative number For example the trefoil knot in Gauss code can be given as 1 2 3 1 2 3Gauss code is limited in its ability to identify knots This problem is partially addressed with by the extended Gauss code See also editList of knot theory topics Molecular knot Circuit topology Quantum topology Ribbon theory Contact geometry Legendrian submanifolds and knots Knots and graphs Necktie Knots Lamp cord trickReferences editSources edit Adams Colin 2004 The Knot Book An Elementary Introduction to the Mathematical Theory of Knots American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3678 1 Adams Colin Crawford Thomas DeMeo Benjamin Landry Michael Lin Alex Tong Montee MurphyKate Park Seojung Venkatesh Saraswathi Yhee Farrah 2015 Knot projections with a single multi crossing Journal of Knot Theory and Its Ramifications 24 3 1550011 30 arXiv 1208 5742 doi 10 1142 S021821651550011X MR 3342136 S2CID 119320887 Adams Colin Hildebrand Martin Weeks Jeffrey 1991 Hyperbolic invariants of knots and links Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 326 1 1 56 doi 10 1090 s0002 9947 1991 0994161 2 JSTOR 2001854 Akbulut Selman King Henry C 1981 All knots are algebraic Comment Math Helv 56 3 339 351 doi 10 1007 BF02566217 S2CID 120218312 Bar Natan Dror 1995 On the Vassiliev knot invariants Topology 34 2 423 472 doi 10 1016 0040 9383 95 93237 2 Burton Benjamin A 2020 The Next 350 Million Knots 36th International Symposium on Computational Geometry SoCG 2020 Leibniz Int Proc Inform Vol 164 Schloss Dagstuhl Leibniz Zentrum fur Informatik pp 25 1 25 17 doi 10 4230 LIPIcs SoCG 2020 25 Collins Graham April 2006 Computing with Quantum Knots Scientific American 294 4 56 63 Bibcode 2006SciAm 294d 56C doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0406 56 PMID 16596880 Dehn Max 1914 Die beiden Kleeblattschlingen Mathematische Annalen 75 3 402 413 doi 10 1007 BF01563732 S2CID 120452571 Conway John H 1970 An enumeration of knots and links and some of their algebraic properties Computational Problems in Abstract Algebra Pergamon pp 329 358 doi 10 1016 B978 0 08 012975 4 50034 5 ISBN 978 0 08 012975 4 Doll Helmut Hoste Jim 1991 A tabulation of oriented links With microfiche supplement Math Comp 57 196 747 761 Bibcode 1991MaCom 57 747D doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 1991 1094946 4 Flapan Erica 2000 When topology meets chemistry A topological look at molecular chirality Outlook Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66254 3 Haefliger Andre 1962 Knotted 4k 1 spheres in 6k space Annals of Mathematics Second Series 75 3 452 466 doi 10 2307 1970208 JSTOR 1970208 Haken Wolfgang 1962 Uber das Homoomorphieproblem der 3 Mannigfaltigkeiten I Mathematische Zeitschrift 80 89 120 doi 10 1007 BF01162369 ISSN 0025 5874 MR 0160196 Hass Joel 1998 Algorithms for recognizing knots and 3 manifolds Chaos Solitons and Fractals 9 4 5 569 581 arXiv math 9712269 Bibcode 1998CSF 9 569H doi 10 1016 S0960 0779 97 00109 4 S2CID 7381505 Hoste Jim Thistlethwaite Morwen Weeks Jeffrey 1998 The First 1 701 935 Knots Math Intelligencer 20 4 33 48 doi 10 1007 BF03025227 S2CID 18027155 Hoste Jim 2005 The Enumeration and Classification of Knots and Links Handbook of Knot Theory pp 209 232 doi 10 1016 B978 044451452 3 50006 X ISBN 978 0 444 51452 3 Levine Jerome 1965 A classification of differentiable knots Annals of Mathematics Second Series 1982 1 15 50 doi 10 2307 1970561 JSTOR 1970561 Kontsevich M 1993 Vassiliev s knot invariants I M Gelfand Seminar ADVSOV Vol 16 pp 137 150 doi 10 1090 advsov 016 2 04 ISBN 978 0 8218 4117 4 Lickorish W B Raymond 1997 An Introduction to Knot Theory Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 175 Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0691 0 ISBN 978 0 387 98254 0 S2CID 122824389 Perko Kenneth 1974 On the classification of knots Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 45 2 262 6 doi 10 2307 2040074 JSTOR 2040074 Rolfsen Dale 1976 Knots and Links Mathematics Lecture Series vol 7 Berkeley California Publish or Perish ISBN 978 0 914098 16 4 MR 0515288 Schubert Horst 1949 Die eindeutige Zerlegbarkeit eines Knotens in Primknoten doi 10 1007 978 3 642 45813 2 ISBN 978 3 540 01419 5 Silver Daniel 2006 Knot Theory s Odd Origins American Scientist 94 2 158 doi 10 1511 2006 2 158 Simon Jonathan 1986 Topological chirality of certain molecules Topology 25 2 229 235 doi 10 1016 0040 9383 86 90041 8 Sossinsky Alexei 2002 Knots mathematics with a twist Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00944 8 Turaev Vladimir G 2016 Quantum Invariants of Knots and 3 Manifolds doi 10 1515 9783110435221 ISBN 978 3 11 043522 1 S2CID 118682559 Weisstein Eric W 2013 Reduced Knot Diagram MathWorld Wolfram Retrieved 8 May 2013 Weisstein Eric W 2013a Reducible Crossing MathWorld Wolfram Retrieved 8 May 2013 Witten Edward 1989 Quantum field theory and the Jones polynomial Comm Math Phys 121 3 351 399 Bibcode 1989CMaPh 121 351W doi 10 1007 BF01217730 S2CID 14951363 Zeeman Erik C 1963 Unknotting combinatorial balls Annals of Mathematics Second Series 78 3 501 526 doi 10 2307 1970538 JSTOR 1970538 Footnotes edit As first sketched using the theory of Haken manifolds by Haken 1962 For a more recent survey see Hass 1998 Marc Lackenby announces a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi polynomial time Mathematical Institute University of Oxford 2021 02 03 retrieved 2021 02 03 Weisstein 2013 Weisstein 2013a Adams et al 2015 Levine J Orr K 2000 A survey of applications of surgery to knot and link theory Surveys on Surgery Theory Papers Dedicated to C T C Wall Annals of mathematics studies vol 1 Princeton University Press CiteSeerX 10 1 1 64 4359 ISBN 978 0691049380 An introductory article to high dimensional knots and links for the advanced readers Ogasa Eiji 2013 Introduction to high dimensional knots arXiv 1304 6053 Bibcode 2013arXiv1304 6053O An introductory article to high dimensional knots and links for beginners Golovnev Anatoly Mashaghi Alireza 7 December 2021 Circuit Topology for Bottom Up Engineering of Molecular Knots Symmetry 13 12 2353 arXiv 2106 03925 Bibcode 2021Symm 13 2353G doi 10 3390 sym13122353 Flapan Erica Mashaghi Alireza Wong Helen 1 June 2023 A tile model of circuit topology for self entangled biopolymers Scientific Reports 13 1 8889 Bibcode 2023NatSR 13 8889F doi 10 1038 s41598 023 35771 8 PMC 10235088 PMID 37264056 The Revenge of the Perko Pair RichardElwes co uk Accessed February 2016 Richard Elwes points out a common mistake in describing the Perko pair Further reading editIntroductory textbooks edit There are a number of introductions to knot theory A classical introduction for graduate students or advanced undergraduates is Rolfsen 1976 Other good texts from the references are Adams 2004 and Lickorish 1997 Adams is informal and accessible for the most part to high schoolers Lickorish is a rigorous introduction for graduate students covering a nice mix of classical and modern topics Cromwell 2004 is suitable for undergraduates who know point set topology knowledge of algebraic topology is not required Burde Gerhard Zieschang Heiner 1985 Knots De Gruyter Studies in Mathematics vol 5 Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 008675 1 Crowell Richard H Fox Ralph 1977 Introduction to Knot Theory Springer ISBN 978 0 387 90272 2 Kauffman Louis H 1987 On Knots Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08435 0 Kauffman Louis H 2013 Knots and Physics 4th ed World Scientific ISBN 978 981 4383 00 4 Cromwell Peter R 2004 Knots and Links Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54831 1 Surveys edit Menasco William W Thistlethwaite Morwen eds 2005 Handbook of Knot Theory Elsevier ISBN 978 0 444 51452 3 Menasco and Thistlethwaite s handbook surveys a mix of topics relevant to current research trends in a manner accessible to advanced undergraduates but of interest to professional researchers Livio Mario 2009 Ch 8 Unreasonable Effectiveness Is God a Mathematician Simon amp Schuster pp 203 218 ISBN 978 0 7432 9405 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Knot theory nbsp Look up knot theory in Wiktionary the free dictionary Mathematics and Knots This is an online version of an exhibition developed for the 1989 Royal Society PopMath RoadShow Its aim was to use knots to present methods of mathematics to the general public History edit Thomson Sir William 1867 On Vortex Atoms Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh VI 94 105 Silliman Robert H December 1963 William Thomson Smoke Rings and Nineteenth Century Atomism Isis 54 4 461 474 doi 10 1086 349764 JSTOR 228151 S2CID 144988108 Movie of a modern recreation of Tait s smoke ring experiment History of knot theory on the home page of Andrew Ranicki Knot tables and software edit KnotInfo Table of Knot Invariants and Knot Theory Resources The Knot Atlas detailed info on individual knots in knot tables KnotPlot software to investigate geometric properties of knots Knotscape software to create images of knots Knoutilus online database and image generator of knots KnotData html Wolfram Mathematica function for investigating knots Regina software for low dimensional topology with native support for knots and links Tables of prime knots with up to 19 crossings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Knot theory amp oldid 1216799470 Alexander Briggs notation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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