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In mathematics, the Alexander polynomial is a knot invariant which assigns a polynomial with integer coefficients to each knot type. J. W. Alexander discovered this, the first knot polynomial, in 1923. In 1969, John Conway showed a version of this polynomial, now called the Alexander-Conway polynomial, could be computed using a skein relation, although its significance was not realized until the discovery of the Jones polynomial in 1984. Soon after Conway's reworking of the Alexander polynomial, it was realized that a similar skein relation was exhibited in Alexander's paper on his polynomial.1
DefinitionLet K be a knot in the 3-sphere. Let X be the infinite cyclic cover of the knot complement of K. There is a covering transformation t acting on X. Consider the first homology (with integer coefficients) of X, denoted H1(X). The transformation t acts on the homology and so we can consider H1(X) a module over The module is finitely presentable; a presentation matrix for this module is called the Alexander matrix. If the number of generators, r, is less than or equal to the number of relations, s, then we consider the ideal generated by all r by r minors of the matrix; this is the Alexander ideal and does not depend on choice of presentation matrix. If r > s, set the ideal equal to 0. If the Alexander ideal is principal, take a generator; this is called an Alexander polynomial of the knot. Since this is only unique up to multiplication by the Laurent monomial Alexander proved that the Alexander ideal is nonzero and always principal. Thus an Alexander polynomial always exists, and is clearly a knot invariant, denoted ΔK(t). Computing the polynomialThe following procedure for computing the Alexander polynomial was given by J. W. Alexander in his paper. Take an oriented diagram of the knot with n crossings; there are n + 2 regions of the knot diagram. To work out the Alexander polynomial, firstly one must create an incidence matrix of size (n, n + 2). The n rows correspond to the n crossings, and the n + 2 columns to the regions. The values for the matrix entries are either 0, 1, −1, t, −t. Consider the entry corresponding to a particular region and crossing. If the region is not adjacent to the crossing, the entry is 0. If the region is adjacent to the crossing, the entry depends on its location. The following table gives the entry, determined by the location of the region at the crossing from the perspective of the incoming undercrossing line.
Remove two columns corresponding to adjacent regions from the matrix, and work out the determinant of the new n by n matrix. Depending on the columns removed, the answer will differ by multiplication by The Alexander polynomial can also be computed from the Seifert matrix. Basic properties of the polynomialThe Alexander polynomial is symmetric: ΔK(t − 1) = ΔK(t)
and it evaluates to a unit on 1:
It is known that every integral Laurent polynomial which is both symmetric and evaluates to a unit at 1 is the Alexander polynomial of a knot (Kawauchi 1996). Geometric significance of the polynomialSince the Alexander ideal is principal, ΔK(t) = 1 if and only if the commutator subgroup of the knot group is perfect. For a topologically slice knot, the Alexander polynomial satisfies the Fox-Milnor condition ΔK(t) = f(t)f(t − 1) where f(t) is some other integral Laurent polynomial. Twice the knot genus is bounded below by the degree of the Alexander polynomial. Michael Freedman proved that a knot in the 3-sphere is topologically slice, i.e. bounds a "locally-flat" topological disc in the 4-ball, if the Alexander polynomial of the knot is trivial (Freedman and Quinn, 1990). There are other relations with surfaces and smooth 4-dimensional topology. For example, under certain assumptions, there is a way of modifying a smooth 4-manifold by performing a surgery that consists of removing a neighborhood of a two-dimensional torus and replacing it with a knot complement crossed with S1. The result is a smooth 4-manifold homeomorphic to the original, though now the Seiberg-Witten invariant has been modified by multiplication with the Alexander polynomial of the knot.2 Knots with symmetries are known to have restricted Alexander polynomials. See the symmetry section in (Kawauchi 1996). Although, the Alexander polynomial can fail to detect some symmetries, such as strong invertibility. If the knot complement fibers over the circle, then the Alexander polynomial of the knot is known to be monic (highest and lowest order terms equal to Relations to satellite operationsIf a knot K is a satellite knot with companion K' ie: there exists an embedding Examples: For a connect-sum Alexander-Conway polynomialAlexander proved the Alexander polynomial satisfies a skein relation. John Conway later rediscovered this in a different form and showed that the skein relation together with a choice of value on the unknot was enough to determine the polynomial. Conway's version is a polynomial in z with integer coefficients, denoted Suppose we are given an oriented link diagram, where L + ,L − ,L0 are link diagrams resulting crossing and smoothing changes on a local region of a specified crossing of the diagram, as indicated in the figure. Here are Conway's skein relations:
The relationship to the standard Alexander polynomial is given by See knot theory for an example computing the Conway polynomial of the trefoil. References
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