Knot theory
Knot theory is a branch of topology that was inspired by observations, as the name suggests, of knots. But progress in the field no longer depends on experiments with twine. Knot theory concerns itself with abstract properties of theoretical knots--the spatial arrangements that in priniciple could be assumed by a loop of string. In mathematical jargon, these are embeddings of the closed circle in three dimensional space.Knot theory originated in an idea of Lord Kelvin's, that atoms were knots in the æther, and that a classification of knots would provide same for the chemical elements. His theory died, but knot theory has grown into a subject with wide and often unexpected applications, for example to theories of quantum gravity, DNA replication and recombination, and to areas of statistical mechanics.
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Reidemeister moves
In 1927, working with this diagrammatic form of knots, Kurt Reidemeister demonstrated that all the allowable moves on a knot could be reduced to three kinds of move on the diagram, shown left. These operations, now called the Reidemeister moves, are:
I. Twist and untwist in either direction.
II. Move one loop completely over another.
III. Move a string completely over or under a crossing.
Reidemeister was the first to demonstrate that knots really exist - that is, that there really are knots that are not equivalent to the unknot. He did this by inventing the first knot invariant, demonstrating a property of a knot diagram which is not changed when we apply any of the Reidemeister moves.
- See also
- Intro to Knot invariants
- Braid theory
- topoisomerase
- DNA topology
- linking number
- Still to come:
Further reading
Other resources