Hyperbolic link
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In mathematics, a hyperbolic link is a link in the 3-sphere with complement that has a complete Riemannian metric of constant negative curvature, i.e. has a hyperbolic geometry. 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, torus knot, satellite knot. As a consequence, hyperbolic knots can be considered plentiful. A similar heuristic applies to hyperbolic links.
As a consequence of Thurston's hyperbolic Dehn surgery theorem, performing Dehn surgeries on a hyperbolic link enables one to obtain many more hyperbolic 3-manifolds.
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[edit] Examples
- Every non-split, prime, alternating link that is not a torus link is hyperbolic by a result of William Menasco.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Colin Adams, The Knot Book, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 0-8050-7380-9
- William Menasco, Closed incompressible surfaces in alternating knot and link complements. Topology 23 (1984), no. 1, 37--44.
- William Thurston, The geometry and topology of 3-manifolds, Princeton lecture notes (1978-1981).
[edit] Further reading
- Colin Adams, Hyperbolic knots (arXiv preprint)