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\newtheorem{prop}{Proposition} \newtheorem{cor}{Corollary} \newtheorem*{utheorem}{Theorem} \newtheorem*{ulemma}{Lemma} \newtheorem*{uprop}{Proposition} \newtheorem*{ucor}{Corollary} \theoremstyle{definition} \newtheorem{defn}{Definition} \newtheorem{example}{Example} \newtheorem*{udefn}{Definition} \newtheorem*{uexample}{Example} \theoremstyle{remark} \newtheorem{remark}{Remark} \newtheorem{note}{Note} \newtheorem*{uremark}{Remark} \newtheorem*{unote}{Note} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \begin{document} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \section*{colorable knot} \hypertarget{colourability}{}\section*{{Colourability}}\label{colourability} \noindent\hyperlink{idea}{Idea}\dotfill \pageref*{idea} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{colourability_2}{$3$-colourability}\dotfill \pageref*{colourability_2} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{colourability_3}{$n$-colourability}\dotfill \pageref*{colourability_3} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{coloring_by_a_quandle}{Coloring by a quandle}\dotfill \pageref*{coloring_by_a_quandle} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{references}{References}\dotfill \pageref*{references} \linebreak \hypertarget{idea}{}\subsection*{{Idea}}\label{idea} The colourability of a knot tells one information about its [[knot group]] yet has a simple, and visually attractive aspect that seems almost to avoid all mention of groups, presentations, etc., except at a fairly naive level. The easiest form of colourability to examine is $3$-colourability. \hypertarget{colourability_2}{}\subsection*{{$3$-colourability}}\label{colourability_2} \begin{udefn} A [[knot diagram]] is \emph{$3$-colourable} if we can assign colours to its arcs such that \begin{enumerate}% \item each arc is assigned one colour; \item \emph{exactly} three colours are used in the assignment; \item at each crossing, either all the arcs have the same colour, or arcs of all three colours meet in the crossing. \end{enumerate} \end{udefn} \begin{uexample} \begin{itemize}% \item The usual diagram for the trefoil knot is $3$-colourable. (Just do it! Each arc is given a separate colour and it works.) \item The [[figure-8 knot]] diagram [[!include figure 8 knot - SVG]] is not $3$-colourable. (Try it!) \end{itemize} \end{uexample} \begin{utheorem} $3$-colourability is a [[knot invariant]]. \end{utheorem} The proof is amusing to work out oneself. You have to show that if a knot diagram $D$ is $3$-colourable and you perform a [[Reidemeister move]] on it then the result is also $3$-colourable. The thing to note is that any arcs that leave the locality of the move must be coloured the same before and after the move is done. \begin{unote} \begin{itemize}% \item We can now use phrases such as `the trefoil knot is $3$-colourable' as its validity does not depend on what diagram is used to represent it, (by the above and by [[Reidemeister moves|Reidemeister's theorem]].) \item As the trefoil knot is $3$-colourable and the unknot is not, \emph{non-trivial knots exist}. Moreover, the trefoil is $3$-colourable and the figure $8$ is not, so these are different. We also get that the [[bridge number]] of the trefoil is $2$, as this provides the missing piece of the argument found in that entry. \end{itemize} \end{unote} There are two comments to make here. First what does this all mean at a deeper topological level? The other is : why stop at $3$? What about $n$-colourability? We will handle the second one first. \hypertarget{colourability_3}{}\subsection*{{$n$-colourability}}\label{colourability_3} Let $n$ be an integer - in practice $n = 1$ or 2 are not that interesting, so usually $n \geq 3$. Let $\mathbb{Z}_n$ be the additive group of integers modulo $n$. \begin{udefn} An \emph{$n$-colouring} of a knot diagram, $D$, is an assignment to each arc of an element of $\mathbb{Z}_n$ in such a way that, at each crossing, the sum of the values assigned on the underpass arcs is twice that on the overpass, and such that in the assignment at least two elements of $\mathbb{Z}_n$ are used. \end{udefn} with $a+c \equiv_n 2b$. What, of course, needs to be checked (left to `the reader') is \begin{itemize}% \item this notion is a generalisation of 3-colourability (i.e. coincides in the case of $n = 3$); \item $n$-colourability is preserved under [[Reidemeister moves]] so can be applied to a knot, not just to a knot diagram; \end{itemize} and then to find some examples of, say, 5-colourability. What knots are 5-colourable? Which $(2,k)$-[[torus knots]] are 5-colorable, and so on. This is not important mathematically, but is quite fun and, in fact, does give insight and experience in working with the Reidemeister moves. \hypertarget{coloring_by_a_quandle}{}\subsection*{{Coloring by a quandle}}\label{coloring_by_a_quandle} There is an even more general notion of coloring a knot $K$ by the elements of a [[quandle]] $(Q,\rhd : Q \times Q \to Q)$. Formally, a coloring of $K$ by $Q$ corresponds to a quandle homomorphism from the fundamental quandle $Q(K)$ of $K$ to $Q$. Concretely, this says that at each crossing with arcs labelled $a$, $b$, and $c$ (as in the above diagram), the identity $c = a \rhd b$ must be respected. In particular, $n$-coloring corresponds to coloring by the set $\mathbb{Z}_n$ equipped with the quandle operation $a \rhd b = 2b - a\,(mod\,n)$, known as the dihedral quandle. \hypertarget{references}{}\subsection*{{References}}\label{references} \begin{itemize}% \item [[Ralph Fox]], \emph{A quick trip through Knot theory} \href{(http://homepages.math.uic.edu/~kauffman/QuickTrip.pdf}{pdf file} \item Wikipedia articles on \href{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tricolorability}{tricolorability} and \href{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_n-coloring}{Fox n-coloring} \end{itemize} [[!redirects colorable knot]] [[!redirects colorable knots]] [[!redirects colourable knot]] [[!redirects colourable knots]] [[!redirects colorability]] [[!redirects colourability]] [[!redirects coloring knots]] [[!redirects knot coloring]] category: knot theory \end{document}