Biquandle

Biquandle

=Biracks=

In mathematics, biquandles and biracks are generalizations of quandles and racks. Whereas the hinterland of quandles and racks is the theory of classical knots, that of the bi-versions, is the theory of virtual knots.

Biquandles and biracks have two binary operations on a set X written a^b and a_b . These satisfy the following three axioms:

1. a^{b{c_b= {a^c}^{b^c}

2. {a_b}_{c_b}= {a_c}_{b^c}

3. {a_b}^{c_b}= {a^c}_{b^c}

These identities appeared in 1992 in reference [FRS] where the object was called a species.

The superscript and subscript notation is useful here because it dispenses with the need for brackets. For exampleif we write a*b for a_b and a**b for a^b then thethree axioms above become

1. (a**b)**(c*b)=(a**c)**(b**c)

2. (a*b)*(c*b)=(a*c)*(b**c)

3. (a*b)**(c*b)=(a**c)*(b**c)

For other notations see .

If in addition the two operations are invertible, that is given a, b in the set X there are unique x, y in the set X such that x^b=a and y_b=a then the set X together with the two operations define a birack.

For example if X , with the operation a^b , is a rack then it is a birack if we define the other operation to be the identity, a_b=a .

For a birack the function S:X^2-> X^2 can be defined by

: S(a,b_a)=(b,a^b).,

Then

1. S is a bijection

2. S_1S_2S_1=S_2S_1S_2 ,

In the second condition, S_1 and S_2 are defined by S_1(a,b,c)=(S(a,b),c) and S_2(a,b,c)=(a,S(b,c)). This condition is sometimes known as the set-theoretic Yang-Baxter equation.

To see that 1. is true note that S' defined by

: S'(b,a^b)=(a,b_a),

is the inverse to

: S ,

To see that 2. is true let us follow the progress of the triple (c,b_c,a_{bc^b}) under S_1S_2S_1 . So

: (c,b_c,a_{bc^b}) o (b,c^b,a_{bc^b}) o (b,a_b,c^{ba_b}) o (a, b^a, c^{ba_b}).

On the other hand, (c,b_c,a_{bc^b}) = (c, b_c, a_{cb_c}) . Its progress under S_2S_1S_2 is

: (c, b_c, a_{cb_c}) o (c, a_c, {b_c}^{a_c}) o (a, c^a, {b_c}^{a_c}) = (a, c^a, {b^a}_{c^a}) o (a, b_a, c_{ab_a}) = (a, b^a, c^{ba_b}).

Any S satisfying 1. 2. is said to be a "switch" (precursor of biquandles and biracks).

Examples of switches are the identity, the "twist" T(a,b)=(b,a) and S(a,b)=(b,a^b) where a^b is the operation of a rack.

A switch will define a birack if the operations are invertible. Note that the identity switch does not do this.

Biquandles

A biquandle is a birack which satisfies some additional structure, as [http://arxiv.org/abs/0708.1951v1 described] by Nelson and Rische. It should be noted that the axioms of a biquandle are "minimal" in the sense that they are the weakest restrictions that can be placed on the two binary operations while making the biquandle of a virtual knot invariant under Reidemeister moves.

Linear biquandles

In Preparation

Application to virtual links and braids

In Preparation

Birack homology

In Preparation

References

* [FJK] Roger Fenn, Mercedes Jordan-Santana, Louis Kauffman "Biquandles and Virtual Links", Topology and its Applications, 145 (2004) 157-175

* [FRS] Roger Fenn, Colin Rourke, Brian Sanderson "An Introduction to Species and the Rack Space", in Topics in Knot Theory (1992), Kluwer 33-55
* [K] L. H. Kauffman, "Virtual Knot Theory", European J. Combin. 20 (1999), 663--690.


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