Link concordance

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Template:Short description In mathematics, two links L0Sn and L1Sn are concordant if there exists an embedding f:L0×[0,1]Sn×[0,1] such that f(L0×{0})=L0×{0} and f(L0×{1})=L1×{1}.

By its nature, link concordance is an equivalence relation. It is weaker than isotopy, and stronger than homotopy: isotopy implies concordance implies homotopy. A link is a slice link if it is concordant to the unlink.

Concordance invariants

A function of a link that is invariant under concordance is called a concordance invariant.

The linking number of any two components of a link is one of the most elementary concordance invariants. The signature of a knot is also a concordance invariant. A subtler concordance invariant are the Milnor invariants, and in fact all rational finite type concordance invariants are Milnor invariants and their products,[1] though non-finite type concordance invariants exist.

Higher dimensions

One can analogously define concordance for any two submanifolds M0,M1N. In this case one considers two submanifolds concordant if there is a cobordism between them in N×[0,1], i.e., if there is a manifold with boundary WN×[0,1] whose boundary consists of M0×{0} and M1×{1}.

This higher-dimensional concordance is a relative form of cobordism – it requires two submanifolds to be not just abstractly cobordant, but "cobordant in N".

See also

References

Further reading

  • J. Hillman, Algebraic invariants of links. Series on Knots and everything. Vol 32. World Scientific.
  • Livingston, Charles, A survey of classical knot concordance, in: Handbook of knot theory, pp 319–347, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2005. Template:MathSciNet Template:Isbn