96 research outputs found

    Alexander invariants of ribbon tangles and planar algebras

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    Ribbon tangles are proper embeddings of tori and cylinders in the 44-ball~B4B^4, "bounding" 33-manifolds with only ribbon disks as singularities. We construct an Alexander invariant A\mathsf{A} of ribbon tangles equipped with a representation of the fundamental group of their exterior in a free abelian group GG. This invariant induces a functor in a certain category RibG\mathsf{R}ib_G of tangles, which restricts to the exterior powers of Burau-Gassner representation for ribbon braids, that are analogous to usual braids in this context. We define a circuit algebra CobG\mathsf{C}ob_G over the operad of smooth cobordisms, inspired by diagrammatic planar algebras introduced by Jones, and prove that the invariant A\mathsf{A} commutes with the compositions in this algebra. On the other hand, ribbon tangles admit diagrammatic representations, throught welded diagrams. We give a simple combinatorial description of A\mathsf{A} and of the algebra CobG\mathsf{C}ob_G, and observe that our construction is a topological incarnation of the Alexander invariant of Archibald. When restricted to diagrams without virtual crossings, A\mathsf{A} provides a purely local description of the usual Alexander poynomial of links, and extends the construction by Bigelow, Cattabriga and the second author

    Twisted Alexander polynomials of Plane Algebraic Curves

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    We consider the Alexander polynomial of a plane algebraic curve twisted by a linear representation. We show that it divides the product of the polynomials of the singularity links, for unitary representations. Moreover, their quotient is given by the determinant of its Blanchfield intersection form. Specializing in the classical case, this gives a geometrical interpretation of Libgober's divisibility Theorem. We calculate twisted polynomials for some algebraic curves and show how they can detect Zariski pairs of equivalent Alexander polynomials and that they are sensitive to nodal degenerations.Comment: 16 pages, no figure

    Slopes and signatures of links

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    We define the slope of a colored link in an integral homology sphere, associated to admissible characters on the link group. Away from a certain singular locus, the slope is a rational function which can be regarded as a multivariate generalization of the Kojima--Yamasaki η\eta-function. It is the ratio of two Conway potentials, provided that the latter makes sense; otherwise, it is a new invariant. The slope is responsible for an extra correction term in the signature formula for the splice of two links, in the previously open exceptional case where both characters are admissible. Using a similar construction for a special class of tangles, we formulate generalized skein relations for the signature

    The signature of a splice

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    We study the behavior of the signature of colored links [Flo05, CF08] under the splice operation. We extend the construction to colored links in integral homology spheres and show that the signature is almost additive, with a correction term independent of the links. We interpret this correction term as the signature of a generalized Hopf link and give a simple closed formula to compute it.Comment: Updated version. Sign corrected in Theorems 2.2 and 2.10 of the previous version. Also Corollary 2.6 was corrected and an Example added. 24 pages, 5 figures. To appear in IMR

    A topological invariant of line arrangements

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    We define a new topological invariant of line arrangements in the complex projective plane. This invariant is a root of unity defined under some combinatorial restrictions for arrangements endowed with some special torsion character on the fundamental group of their complements. It is derived from the peripheral structure on the group induced by the inclusion map of the boundary of a tubular neigborhood in the exterior of the arrangement. By similarity with knot theory, it can be viewed as an analogue of linking numbers. This is an orientation-preserving invariant for ordered arrangements. We give an explicit method to compute the invariant from the equations of the arrangement, by using wiring diagrams introduced by Arvola, that encode the braid monodromy. Moreover, this invariant is a crucial ingredient to compute the depth of a character satisfying some resonant conditions, and complete the existent methods by Libgober and the first author. Finally, we compute the invariant for extended MacLane arrangements with an additional line and observe that it takes different values for the deformation classes.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure

    Torsions and intersection forms of 4-manifolds from trisection diagrams

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    Gay and Kirby introduced trisections which describe any closed oriented smooth 4-manifold XX as a union of three four-dimensional handlebodies. A trisection is encoded in a diagram, namely three collections of curves in a closed oriented surface Σ\Sigma, guiding the gluing of the handlebodies. Any morphism φ\varphi from π1(X)\pi_1(X) to a finitely generated free abelian group induces a morphism on π1(Σ)\pi_1(\Sigma). We express the twisted homology and Reidemeister torsion of (X;φ)(X;\varphi) in terms of the first homology of (Σ;φ)(\Sigma;\varphi) and the three subspaces generated by the collections of curves. We also express the intersection form of (X;φ)(X;\varphi) in terms of the intersection form of (Σ;φ)(\Sigma;\varphi).Comment: Comments are welcom
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