Alexander's theorem
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
In mathematics Alexander's theorem states that every knot or link can be represented as a closed braid. The theorem is named after James Waddell Alexander II, who published its proof in 1923.
Braids were first considered as a tool of knot theory by Alexander. His theorem gives a positive answer to
- is it always possible to transform a given knot into a closed braid?
However, the correspondence between knots and braids is clearly not one-to-one: a knot may have many braid representations. For example, conjugate braids yield equivalent knots. This leads to a second fundamental question:
- which closed braids represent the same knot type?
That question is addressed in Markov's theorem, which gives ‘moves’ relating any two closed braids that represent the same knot.
References
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