Detecting unknotted graphs in 3-space (Q1179973): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 16:05, 10 December 2024
scientific article
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English | Detecting unknotted graphs in 3-space |
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Detecting unknotted graphs in 3-space (English)
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27 June 1992
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The authors call a finite graph \(G\) abstractly planar if it is embeddable in \(S^ 2\) (or equivalently, in the plane), and planar if it lies on an embedded surface in \(S^ 3\) which is homeomorphic to \(S^ 2\). The main result is a necessary and sufficient condition for a graph in \(S^ 3\) to be planar: \(G\) is planar if and only if it is abstractly planar and for every subgraph \(G'\subseteq G\) the fundamental group \(\pi(S^ 3-G')\) is free. This result can be viewed as an unknotting theorem in the style of \textit{Papakyriakopoulos}: a simple closed curve (i.e., a graph with one vertex and one edge) in \(S^ 3\) is unknotted if and only if its complement in \(S^ 3\) has free fundamental group. The above theorem generalizes also a more recent result of \textit{C. McA. Gordon} [Topology Appl. 27, 285-299 (1987; Zbl 0634.57007)], where \(G\) has a single vertex and an arbitrary number of edges.
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knotted graph
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embedding in the 3-space
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planar
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