06-1350/Class Notes for Thursday September 14: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
In the right hand side, the first bracket is called the <i>0-smoothing</i> and the second |
In the right hand side, the first bracket is called the <i>0-smoothing</i> and the second |
||
is called the <i>1-smoothing</i>. To calculate the Kauffman bracket we must sum over all |
is called the <i>1-smoothing</i>. To calculate the Kauffman bracket we must sum over all |
||
possible smoothings. For instance, for the |
possible smoothings. For instance, for the trefoil, we 2<sup>3</sup> = 8 summands, one of which will |
||
be: |
be: |
||
<br><br> |
<br><br> |
Revision as of 21:30, 21 October 2006
|
The Mathematica notebook we wrote is here.
Jones Polynomial
The simplest way to define the Jones polynomial is via the Kauffman bracket. The idea is to
eliminate all crossings using the rule:
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/6/64/Kauffman.png
In the right hand side, the first bracket is called the 0-smoothing and the second
is called the 1-smoothing. To calculate the Kauffman bracket we must sum over all
possible smoothings. For instance, for the trefoil, we 23 = 8 summands, one of which will
be:
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/8/8b/Trifoil-smoothing.png
Each summand will have no crossing and thus will be a union of (possibly nested) unknots.
We define the bracket polynomial of k unknots to be dk-1 for some indeterminate d. Our hopes
that our polynomial in ℤ[d,A,B] will be an invariant under the Reidmeister moves. We first
verify R2.
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/c/cd/Jones-r2.png
Collecting like terms and comparing we find AB = 1 and A2 + B2 + dAB = 0. Thus, we must
have B = A-1 and d = -(A2 + A2). Things are looking bad, we still have two moves to verify
and we already lost two of our variables.
We now verify R3. For this we remark that
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/f/fb/Jones-r3.png
The two diagrams with coefficients B coincide; and the diagrams with coefficients A differ by
two R2 moves. Now we verify R1:
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/9/99/Jones-r1.png
The right hand side evaluates to A + A-1(-A2 -A-2) = -A3 of the desired. This is
unfortunate. One could salvage something by taking A to be one of the cube roots of -1;
however, the right way out of this is to define another invariant which fails in the exactly the
same way, and multiply it with the bracket polynomial.
Writhe
The invariant we are looking for is called the writhe. If D is a diagram of an oriented knot, we
define
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/8/88/Mathtext1.png
We choose +1 if the crossing is positive (the overpass goes over the underpass from left to right) and -1 if the crossing is negative (otherwise):
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/3/38/Crossings.png
Lets have an example. Notice that the orientation of the knot is actually irrelevant.
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/c/c5/Writhe-example.png
We now show that the writhe is also invariant under R2 and R3, under R1 we gain ±1
depending which way we apply it. In R2, the two crossings have opposite signs; and in R3, the
diagonal crossing doesn’t change sign and the other two are reversed.
http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/f/f9/Writhe-reid.png
It follows that 〈D〉⋅(-A-3)w(d) is a knot invariant. This is a polynomial in A, we now substitute q http://katlas.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/images/2/23/Mathtext2.png for A and call this the Jones polynomial (which strictly speaking, is not really a polynomial).