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Math
758 Spring 2002
Topics in Topology
| Instructor: |
James Conant |
| Time: |
TR 8:40-9:55 |
| Room: |
Malott 205 |
This course is an introduction to the currently developing field of finite
type (or Vassiliev) invariants of low dimensional objects. The theory
of finite type invariants supports a rich and beautiful structure, but
so far it has remained essentially independent from the rest of topology.
A recent preprint of Garoufalidis and Rozansky, however, starts to draw
a connection with classical algebraic topology, and it is the ultimate
goal of the course to understand this paper. First, we will have to understand
the so-called Kontsevich integral, which is a powerful invariant of knots
and links, taking values in power series of trivalent graphs. Secondly,
we have to understand the generalization of the Kontsevich integral to
knots in homology 3-spheres. The paper of Garoufalidis and Rozansky starts
to give an algebraic topological explanation of this last invariant, similar
in spirit to the algebraic topological explanation of the Alexander polynomial
as a homological invariant of the infinite cyclic cover of a knot complement.
Last modified:
April 7, 2003
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