- History of knot theory
For thousands of years, knots have been used for basic purposes such as recording information, fastening and tying objects together. Over time people realized that different knots were better at different tasks, such as
climbing orsailing . Knots were also regarded as having spiritual and religious symbolism in addition to their aesthetic qualities. Theendless knot appears in Tibetan Buddhism, while theBorromean rings have made repeated appearances in different cultures, often symbolizing unity. The Celtic monks who created theBook of Kells lavished entire pages with intricateCeltic knot work.Knots were studied from a mathematical viewpoint by
Carl Friedrich Gauss , who in 1833 developed theGauss linking integral for computing thelinking number of two knots. His studentJohann Benedict Listing , after whom Listing's knot is named, furthered their study.The early, significant stimulus in
knot theory would arrive later withSir William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) and his theory of vortex atoms. Harv|Sossinsky|2002|p=1–3In 1867 after observing Scottish
physicist Peter Tait's experiments involving smoke rings, Thomson came to the idea that atoms were knots of swirling vortices in the æther. Chemical elements would thus correspond to knots and links. Tait's experiments were inspired by a paper of Helmholtz's on vortex-rings in incompressible fluids. Thomson and Tait believed that an understanding and classification of all possible knots would explain why atoms absorb and emit light at only the discretewavelength s that they do. For example, Thomson thought that sodium could be theHopf link due to its two lines of spectra. Harv|Sossinsky|2002|p=3–10Tait subsequently began listing unique knots in the belief that he was creating a table of elements. He formulated what are now known as the
Tait conjectures onalternating knot s. (The conjectures were finally resolved in the 1990s.) Tait's knot tables were subsequently improved upon by C. N. Little and T. P. Kirkman. Harv|Sossinsky|2002|p=6James Clerk Maxwell , a colleague and friend of Thomson's and Tait's, also developed a strong interest in knots. Maxwell studied Listing's work on knots. He re-interpreted Gauss' linking integral in terms of electromagnetic theory. In his formulation, the integral represented the work done by a charged particle moving along one component of the link under the influence of the magnetic field generated by an electric current along the other component. Maxwell also continued the study of smoke rings by considering three interacting rings.When the "luminiferous æther" was not detected in the
Michelson–Morley experiment ,vortex theory became completely obsolete, and knot theory ceased to be of great scientific interest. Modern physics demonstrates that the discrete wavelengths depend onquantum energy level s.Following the development of
topology in the early 20th century spearheaded byHenri Poincaré , topologists such asMax Dehn ,J. W. Alexander , andKurt Reidemeister , investigated knots. Out of this sprang theReidemeister move s and theAlexander polynomial .Harv|Sossinsky|2002|p=15–45 Dehn also developedDehn surgery , which related knots to the general theory of 3-manifolds, and formulated theDehn problems ingroup theory , such as theword problem . Early pioneers in the first half of the 20th century includeRalph Fox , who popularized the subject. In this early period, knot theory primarily consisted of study into theknot group and homological invariants of theknot complement .In 1961
Wolfgang Haken discovered an algorithm that can determine whether or not a knot is a knot. He also outlined a strategy for solving the general knot recognition problem, i.e. determining if two given knots are equivalent or not. In the early 1970s,Friedhelm Waldhausen announced the completion of Haken's program based on his results and those ofKlaus Johannson ,William Jaco ,Peter Shalen , andGeoffrey Hemion . In 2003 Sergei Matveev pointed out and filled in a crucial gap.A few major discoveries in the late 20th century greatly rejuvenated knot theory and brought it further into the mainstream. In the late 1970s
William Thurston 's hyperbolization theorem introduced the theory ofhyperbolic 3-manifold s into knot theory and made it of prime importance. In 1982, Thurston received a Fields Medal, the highest honor in mathematics, largely due to this breakthrough. Thurston's work also led, after much expansion by others, to the effective use of tools fromrepresentation theory andalgebraic geometry . Important results followed, including theGordon-Luecke theorem , which showed that knots were determined (up to mirror-reflection) by their complements, and theSmith conjecture .Interest in knot theory from the general mathematical community grew significantly after
Vaughan Jones ' discovery of theJones polynomial in 1984. This led to other knot polynomials such as thebracket polynomial ,HOMFLY polynomial , andKauffman polynomial . Jones was awarded theFields medal in 1990 for this work.Harv|Sossinsky|2002|p=71–89 In 1988Edward Witten proposed a new framework for the Jones polynomial, utilizing existing ideas frommathematical physics , such asFeynman path integral s, and introducing new notions such astopological quantum field theory Harv|Witten |1989. Witten also received the Fields medal, in 1990, partly for this work. Witten's description of the Jones polynomial implied related invariants for3-manifold s. Simultaneous, but different, approaches by other mathematicians resulted in theWitten-Reshetikhin-Turaev invariant s and various so-called "quantum invariant s", which appear to be the mathematically rigorous version of Witten's invariants Harv|Turaev|1994.In 1992, the
Journal of Knot Theory and Its Ramifications was founded, establishing a journal devoted purely to knot theory.In the early 1990s, knot invariants which encompass the Jones polynomial and its generalizations, called the
finite type invariant s, were discovered by Vassiliev and Goussarov. These invariants, initially described using "classical" topological means, were shown by 1994 Fields MedalistMaxim Kontsevich to result from integration, using theKontsevich integral , of certain algebraic structures (Harvnb|Kontsevich|1993, Harvnb|Bar-Natan|1995).These breakthroughs were followed by the discovery of
Khovanov homology and knot Floer homology, which greatly generalize the Jones and Alexander polynomials. These homology theories have contributed to further mainstreaming of knot theory.In the last several decades of the 20th century, scientists and mathematicians began finding applications of knot theory to problems in
biology andchemistry . Knot theory can be used to determine if a molecule is chiral (has a "handedness") or not. Chemical compounds of different handedness can have drastically differing properties, thalidomide being a notable example of this. More generally, knot theoretic methods have been used in studyingtopoisomer s, topologically different arrangements of the same chemical formula. The closely related theory of tangles have been effectively used in studying the action of certain enzymes on DNA. Harv|Flapan|2000 The interdisciplinary field ofphysical knot theory investigates mathematical models of knots based on physical considerations in order to understand knotting phenomena arising in materials like DNA or polymers.In physics it has been shown that certain hypothetical
quasiparticle s such as nonabeliananyon s exhibit useful topological properties, namely that theirquantum state s are left unchanged byambient isotopy of theirworld line s. It is hoped that they can be used to make aquantum computer resistant todecohere nce. Since the world lines form a mathematical "braid",braid theory , a related field toknot theory , is used in studying the properties of such a computer, called atopological quantum computer . [ cite news | first = Graham | last = Collins | title = Computing with Quantum Knots | work =Scientific American | pages = 56–63 | date = April 2006 ]ee also
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Knot theory
*Khipu Notes
References
*Silver, Dan, " [http://www.southalabama.edu/mathstat/personal_pages/silver/scottish.pdf Scottish physics and knot theory's odd origins] " (expanded version of Silver, "Knot theory's odd origins," American Scientist, 94, No. 2, 158–165)
*Citation | last =Sossinsky | first =Alexei | date =2002 | year =2002 | title =Knots, mathematics with a twist | publisher =Harvard University Press | isbn =0-674-00944-4External links
History
*Thomson, Sir William (Lord Kelvin), " [http://zapatopi.net/kelvin/papers/on_vortex_atoms.html On Vortex Atoms] ", Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Vol. VI, 1867, pp. 94–105.
*Silliman, Robert H., "William Thomson: Smoke Rings and Nineteenth-Century Atomism", Isis, Vol. 54, No. 4. (Dec., 1963), pp. 461–474. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0021-1753%28196312%2954%3A4%3C461%3AWTSRAN%3E2.0.CO%3B2-0 JSTOR link]
* [http://www.southalabama.edu/mathstat/personal_pages/silver/smoke%20rings.mpg Movie] of a modern recreation of Tait's smoke ring experiment
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