38 research outputs found
Unknotting Numbers are not Realized in Minimal Projections for a Class of Rational Knots
In previous results, Bleiler and Nakanishi produced an example of
a knot where the unknotting number was not realized in a minimal projection
of the knot. Bernhard generalied this example to an infi{}nite class
of examples with Conway notation with j
2. In this paper we examine the entire class of knots given
in Conway notation by (2j + 1, 2k + 1, 2j) where j 1 and k
0 and we determine that a large class of knots of this form
have the unknotting number not realized in a minimal projection. We
also produce an infi{}nite class of two component links with unknotting
number gap arbitrarily large
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Homogeneity groups of ends of open 3-manifolds
For every finitely generated abelian group G, we construct an irreducible
open 3-manifold M[subscript G] whose end set is homeomorphic to a Cantor set and
whose homogeneity group is isomorphic to G. The end homogeneity group
is the group of self-homeomorphisms of the end set that extend to homeomorphisms
of the 3-manifold. The techniques involve computing the embedding
homogeneity groups of carefully constructed Antoine-type Cantor sets
made up of rigid pieces. In addition, a generalization of an Antoine Cantor
set using infinite chains is needed to construct an example with integer homogeneity
group. Results about the local genus of points in Cantor sets and
about the geometric index are also used.This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Mathematical Sciences Publishers and can be found at: http://msp.org/pjm/2014/269-1/index.xhtml.Keywords: Manifold end, Homogeneity group, Defining sequence, Geometric index, Cantor set, Abelian group, Rigidity, Open 3-manifol
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Inequivalent Cantor sets in ³ whose complements have the same fundamental group
For each Cantor set C in R³, all points of which have bounded local genus, we show that there are infinitely many inequivalent Cantor sets in R³ with the complement having the same fundamental group as the complement of C. This answers a question from Open Problems in Topology and has as an application a simple construction of nonhomeomorphic open 3-manifolds with the same fundamental group. The main techniques used are analysis of local genus of points of Cantor sets, a construction for producing rigid Cantor sets with simply connected complement, and manifold decomposition theory. The results presented give an argument that for certain groups G, there are uncountably many nonhomeomorphic open 3-manifolds with fundamental group G.First published in Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society in Vol. 141 no. 8, published by the American Mathematical Society. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Mathematical Society and can be found at: http://www.ams.org/publications/journals/journalsframework/procKeywords: Cantor set, Defining sequence, End, Local genus, Open 3-manifold, Fundamental group, Rigidit
Topology and Chaos
Abstract. We discuss some basic topological techniques used in the study of chaotic dynamical systems. This paper is partially motivated by a talk given by the second author at the 7th international summer school and conference Chaos 2008: Let's Face Chaos Through Nonlinear Dynamic