Link Invariants
Examples
Related concepts
CW-complex, Hausdorff space, second-countable space, sober space
connected space, locally connected space, contractible space, locally contractible space
Writhe is a measure of how much a knot or link writhes around itself. As a 1-dimensional line cannot actually twist, this is not a knot invariant but is an invariant of framed knots (and links). Since a link diagram can be given a natural framing (the blackboard framing), it is possible to compute the write of a specific diagram. One place where this is used very neatly is to convert the Kauffman bracket?, which is an invariant of framed links, in to the Jones polynomial, being an invariant of ordinary links.
Recall that a framed link can be thought of as a link together with a normal direction along each component, which we call the framing direction.
The writhe of a framed link is the linking number of the link with its infinitesimal displacement in the framing direction.
For an oriented link diagram, the writhe is defined using the orientation of the crossings.
The writhe of an oriented link diagram is defined to be the sum of the orientations of its crossings.