TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that 2+1 dimensional quantum Yang-Mills theory with an action consisting purely of the Chern-Simons term is exactly soluble and gave a natural framework for understanding the Jones polynomial of knot theory in three dimensional terms.
Abstract: It is shown that 2+1 dimensional quantum Yang-Mills theory, with an action consisting purely of the Chern-Simons term, is exactly soluble and gives a natural framework for understanding the Jones polynomial of knot theory in three dimensional terms. In this version, the Jones polynomial can be generalized fromS
3 to arbitrary three manifolds, giving invariants of three manifolds that are computable from a surgery presentation. These results shed a surprising new light on conformal field theory in 1+1 dimensions.
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that (6, n) and (c, ra) represent the same closed braid (up to link isotopy) if and only if they are equivalent for the equivalence relation generated by Markov moves of types 1 and 2 on the disjoint union of the braid groups.
Abstract: Thus, the trivial link with n components is represented by the pair (l ,n), and the unknot is represented by (si$2 * * • s n i , n) for any n, where si, $2, • • • > sn_i are the usual generators for Bn. The second example shows that the correspondence of (b, n) with b is many-to-one, and a theorem of A. Markov [15] answers, in theory, the question of when two braids represent the same link. A Markov move of type 1 is the replacement of (6, n) by (gbg~, n) for any element g in Bn, and a Markov move of type 2 is the replacement of (6, n) by (6s J 1 , n-hl). Markov's theorem asserts that (6, n) and (c, ra) represent the same closed braid (up to link isotopy) if and only if they are equivalent for the equivalence relation generated by Markov moves of types 1 and 2 on the disjoint union of the braid groups. Unforunately, although the conjugacy problem has been solved by F. Garside [8] within each braid group, there is no known algorithm to decide when (6, n) and (c, m) are equivalent. For a proof of Markov's theorem see J. Birman's book [4]. The difficulty of applying Markov's theorem has made it difficult to use braids to study links. The main evidence that they might be useful was the existence of a representation of dimension n — 1 of Bn discovered by W. Burau in [5]. The representation has a parameter t, and it turns out that the determinant of 1-(Burau matrix) gives the Alexander polynomial of the closed braid. Even so, the Alexander polynomial occurs with a normalization which seemed difficult to predict.
TL;DR: In this article, a state model for the Jones polynomial was constructed for the bracket polynomials, which is a normalization of a regular isotopy invariant of unoriented knots and links.
TL;DR: In this article, a new isotopy invariant of oriented links of tamely embedded circles in 3-space is presented, where the image of the link is a union of transversely intersecting immersed curves, each provided with an orientation, and undercrossings are indicated by broken lines.
Abstract: The purpose of this note is to announce a new isotopy invariant of oriented links of tamely embedded circles in 3-space. We represent links by plane projections, using the customary conventions that the image of the link is a union of transversely intersecting immersed curves, each provided with an orientation, and undercrossings are indicated by broken lines. Following Conway [6], we use the symbols L+, Lo, L_ to denote links having plane projections which agree except in a small disk, and inside that disk are represented by the pictures of Figure 1. Conway showed that the one-variable Alexander polynomials of L+, Lo, L_ (when suitably normalized) satisfy the relation
TL;DR: In this article, a Floer-homology invariant for knots in an oriented three-manifold, closely related to the Heegaard Floer homologies for threemanifolds defined in an earlier paper, was defined.