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  2. History of knot theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_knot_theory

    A few major discoveries in the late 20th century greatly rejuvenated knot theory and brought it further into the mainstream. In the late 1970s William Thurston's hyperbolization theorem introduced the theory of hyperbolic 3-manifolds into knot theory and made it of prime importance. In 1982, Thurston received a Fields Medal, the highest honor ...

  3. Thurston–Bennequin number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thurston–Bennequin_number

    In the mathematical theory of knots, the Thurston–Bennequin number, or Bennequin number, of a front diagram of a Legendrian knot is defined as the writhe of the diagram minus the number of right cusps. It is named after William Thurston and Daniel Bennequin.

  4. Knot theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knot_theory

    William Thurston proved many knots are hyperbolic knots, ... This pattern, the horoball pattern, is itself a useful invariant. ... (2005), Handbook of Knot Theory ...

  5. Hyperbolic link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperbolic_link

    A hyperbolic knot is a hyperbolic link with one component. As a consequence of the work of William Thurston, it is known that every knot is precisely one of the following: hyperbolic, a torus knot, or a satellite knot. As a consequence, hyperbolic knots can be considered plentiful. A similar heuristic applies to hyperbolic links.

  6. Thurstonian model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thurstonian_model

    A Thurstonian model is a stochastic transitivity model with latent variables for describing the mapping of some continuous scale onto discrete, possibly ordered categories of response.

  7. Knot (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knot_(mathematics)

    A polygonal knot is a knot whose image in R 3 is the union of a finite set of line segments. [6] A tame knot is any knot equivalent to a polygonal knot. [6] [Note 2] Knots which are not tame are called wild, [7] and can have pathological behavior. [7] In knot theory and 3-manifold theory, often the adjective "tame" is omitted. Smooth knots, for ...

  8. List of knot theory topics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_knot_theory_topics

    Knot theory is the study of mathematical knots. While inspired by knots which appear in daily life in shoelaces and rope, a mathematician's knot differs in that the ends are joined so that it cannot be undone. In precise mathematical language, a knot is an embedding of a circle in 3-dimensional Euclidean space, R 3.

  9. Thurston's 24 questions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thurston's_24_questions

    Thurston's 24 questions are a set of mathematical problems in differential geometry posed by American mathematician William Thurston in his influential 1982 paper Three-dimensional manifolds, Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry published in the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. [1]