Abstract/Details

HOMOTOPY TYPE INVARIANTS OF FOUR-DIMENSIONAL KNOT COMPLEMENTS

SUCIU, ALEXANDRU ION.   Columbia University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1984. 8427479.

Abstract (summary)

This thesis studies the homotopy type of smooth four dimensional knot complements. In contrast with the classical case, high-dimensional knot complements with fundamental group different from are never aspherical. The second homotopy group already provides examples of the way in which a knot in S('4) can fail to be determined by its fundamental group (C. McA. Gordon, S. P. Plotnick).

A natural class of knots to investigate is ribbon knots. They bound immersed disks with "ribbon singularities". A method is given for computing (pi)(,2) of such knot complements. I show that there are infinitely many ribbon knots in S('4) with isomorphic (pi)(,1) but distinct (pi)(,2) (viewed as (pi)(,1)-modules). They appear as boundaries of distinct ribbon disk pairs with the same exterior. These knots have the fundamental group of the spun trefoil, but none in a spun knot.

To a four-dimensional knot complement, one can associate a certain cohomology class, the first k-invariant of Eilenberg, MacLane and Whitehead. In a joint paper, Plotnick and I showed that there are arbitrarily many knots in S('4) whose complements have isomorphic (pi)(,1) and (pi)(,2) (as (pi)(,1) - modules), but distinct k-invariants. Here I prove this result using examples which are somewhat more natural and easier to produce. They are constructed from a fibered knot with fiber a punctured lens space and a ribbon knot by surgery.

The proofs involve writing down explicit cell complexes, computing twisted cohomology groups, combinatorial group theory and calculations in group rings.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Mathematics
Classification
0405: Mathematics
Identifier / keyword
Pure sciences
Title
HOMOTOPY TYPE INVARIANTS OF FOUR-DIMENSIONAL KNOT COMPLEMENTS
Author
SUCIU, ALEXANDRU ION
Number of pages
94
Degree date
1984
School code
0054
Source
DAI-B 45/10, Dissertation Abstracts International
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
ISBN
979-8-204-53131-4
University/institution
Columbia University
University location
United States -- New York
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
8427479
ProQuest document ID
303285286
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/303285286