Bing double

From HandWiki
Short description: Operation on a knot producing a link with two components


The unknot (left) and its Bing double (right).

In knot theory, a field of mathematics, the Bing double of a knot is a link with two components which follow the pattern of the knot and "hook together". Bing doubles were introduced in (Bing 1952) by their namesake, the American mathematician R. H. Bing.[1] The Bing double of a slice knot is a slice link, though it is unknown whether the converse is true.[2] The components of a Bing double bound disjoint Seifert surfaces.[2]

A solid torus encasing the Bing double of the unknot.

The Bing double of a knot K is defined by placing the Bing double of the unknot in the solid torus surrounding it, as shown in the figure, and then twisting that solid torus into the shape of K.[2] This definition is similar to that for Whitehead doubles. The Bing double of the unknot is also called the Bing link.[3]

See also

References

Notes

  1. Cimasoni 2006, p. 2395.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cimasoni 2006, p. 2397.
  3. Jiang et al. 2002, pp. 189–190.

Sources

  • Bing, R. H. (1952), "A homeomorphism between the 3-sphere and the sum of two solid horned spheres", Annals of Mathematics 56 (2): 354–362 .
  • Cimasoni, David (2006), "Slicing Bing doubles", Algebraic & Geometric Topology 6: 2395–2415 .
  • Jiang, Boju; Lin, Xiao-Song; Wang, Shicheng; Wu, Ying-Qing (2002), "Achirality of knots and links", Topology and its Applications 119 (2): 185-208, doi:10.1016/S0166-8641(01)00062-1, ISSN 0166-8641 .

Further reading