Lissajous-toric knot: Difference between revisions

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Lissajous-toric knot with parameters 5, 6 and 22 in braid form (with z-axis in horizontal direction)

In knot theory, a Lissajous-toric knot is a knot defined by parametric equations of the form:

x(t)=(2+sinqt)cosNt,y(t)=(2+sinqt)sinNt,z(t)=cosp(t+ϕ),

where N, p, and q are integers, the phase shift ϕ is a real number and the parameter t varies between 0 and 2π.[1]

For p=q the knot is a torus knot.

Braid and billiard knot definitions

Lissajous-toric knot T(4,7,35) as a billiard knot, showing period 7

In braid form these knots can be defined in a square solid torus (i.e. the cube [1,1]3 with identified top and bottom) as

x(t)=sin2πqt,y(t)=cos2πp(t+ϕ),z(t)=2(NtNt)1,t[0,1].

The projection of this Lissajous-toric knot onto the x-y-plane is a Lissajous curve.

Replacing the sine and cosine functions in the parametrization by a triangle wave transforms a Lissajous-toric knot isotopically into a billiard curve inside the solid torus. Because of this property Lissajous-toric knots are also called billiard knots in a solid torus.[2]

Lissajous-toric knots were first studied as billiard knots and they share many properties with billiard knots in a cylinder.[3] They also occur in the analysis of singularities of minimal surfaces with branch points[4] and in the study of the Three-body problem.[5]

The knots in the subfamily with p=ql, with an integer l1, are known as ′Lemniscate knots′.[6] Lemniscate knots have period q and are fibred. The knot shown on the right is of this type (with l=5).

Properties

Symmetries of the Lissajous-toric knot T(3,8,7): symmetric union (vertical axis), rotation into mirror image and palindromic property within Q (horizontal axis)

Lissajous-toric knots are denoted by K(N,q,p,ϕ). To ensure that the knot is traversed only once in the parametrization the conditions gcd(N,q)=gcd(N,p)=1 are needed. In addition, singular values for the phase, leading to self-intersections, have to be excluded.

The isotopy class of Lissajous-toric knots surprisingly does not depend on the phase ϕ (up to mirroring). If the distinction between a knot and its mirror image is not important, the notation K(N,q,p) can be used.

The properties of Lissajous-toric knots depend on whether p and q are coprime or d=gcd(p,q)>1. The main properties are:

  • Interchanging p and q:
K(N,q,p)=K(N,p,q) (up to mirroring).
  • Ribbon property:
If p and q are coprime, K(N,q,p) is a symmetric union and therefore a ribbon knot.
  • Periodicity:
If d=gcd(p,q)>1, the Lissajous-toric knot has period d and the factor knot is a ribbon knot.
  • Strongly positive amphicheirality:
If p and q have different parity, then K(N,q,p) is strongly positive amphicheiral.
  • Period 2:
If p and q are both odd, then K(N,q,p) has period 2 (for even N) or is freely 2-periodic (for odd N).

Example

The knot T(3,8,7), shown in the graphics, is a symmetric union and a ribbon knot (in fact, it is the composite knot 5151). It is strongly positive amphicheiral: a rotation by π maps the knot to its mirror image, keeping its orientation. An additional horizontal symmetry occurs as a combination of the vertical symmetry and the rotation (′double palindromicity′ in Kin/Nakamura/Ogawa).

′Classification′ of billiard rooms

In the following table a systematic overview of the possibilities to build billiard rooms from the interval and the circle (interval with identified boundaries) is given:

Billiard room Billiard knots
[1,1]3 Lissajous knots
[1,1]2×𝕊1 Lissajous-toric knots
[1,1]×𝕊1×𝕊1 Torus knots
𝕊1×𝕊1×𝕊1 (room not embeddable into 3)

In the case of Lissajous knots reflections at the boundaries occur in all of the three cube's dimensions. In the second case reflections occur in two dimensions and we have a uniform movement in the third dimension. The third case is nearly equal to the usual movement on a torus, with an additional triangle wave movement in the first dimension.

References

Template:Reflist

  1. See M. Soret and M. Ville: Lissajous-toric knots, J. Knot Theory Ramifications 29, 2050003 (2020).
  2. See C. Lamm: Deformation of cylinder knots, 4th chapter of Ph.D. thesis, ‘Zylinder-Knoten und symmetrische Vereinigungen‘, Bonner Mathematische Schriften 321 (1999), available since 2012 as Template:ArXiv.
  3. See C. Lamm and D. Obermeyer: Billiard knots in a cylinder, J. Knot Theory Ramifications 8, 353–-366 (1999).
  4. See Soret/Ville.
  5. See E. Kin, H. Nakamura and H. Ogawa: Lissajous 3-braids, J. Math. Soc. Japan 75, 195--228 (2023) (or Template:ArXiv).
  6. See B. Bode, M.R. Dennis, D. Foster and R.P. King: Knotted fields and explicit fibrations for lemniscate knots, Proc. Royal Soc. A (2017).