517 research outputs found
Alternating knots with unknotting number one
We prove that if an alternating knot has unknotting number one, then there
exists an unknotting crossing in any alternating diagram. This is done by
showing that the obstruction to unknotting number one developed by Greene in
his work on alternating 3-braid knots is sufficient to identify all unknotting
number one alternating knots. As a consequence, we also get a converse to the
Montesinos trick: an alternating knot has unknotting number one if its branched
double cover arises as half-integer surgery on a knot in . We also reprove
a characterisation of almost-alternating diagrams of the unknot originally due
to Tsukamoto.Comment: 38 pages, 15 figures. This a significant revision of the first
version. A proof of Tsukamoto's work on almost-alternating diagrams of the
unknot is now included. There is also an additional formulation of the main
theorem which makes precise the signs of the unknotting crossings and the
resulting half-integer surgeries. Some comments on potential further
questions have also been adde
On calculating the slice genera of 11- and 12-crossing knots
This paper contains the results of efforts to determine values of the smooth
and the topological slice genus of 11- and 12-crossing knots. Upper bounds for
these genera were produced by using a computer to search for genus one
concordances between knots. For the topological slice genus further upper
bounds were produced using the algebraic genus. Lower bounds were obtained
using a new obstruction from the Seifert form and by use of Donaldson's
diagonalization theorem. These results complete the computation of the
topological slice genera for all knots with at most 11 crossings and leaves the
smooth genera unknown for only two 11-crossing knots. For 12 crossings there
remain merely 25 knots whose smooth or topological slice genus is unknown.Comment: 9 pages + 11 pages of appendices. This is a substantial expansion of
the original article. This version features a second author and new
techniques for calculating the topological slice genu
Characterizing slopes for the -pretzel knot
In this note we exhibit concrete examples of characterizing slopes for the
knot , aka the -pretzel knot. Although it was shown by
Lackenby that every knot admits infinitely many characterizing slopes, the
non-constructive nature of the proof means that there are very few hyperbolic
knots for which explicit examples of characterizing slopes are known.Comment: 9 page
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