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HANDBOOK OF KNOT THEORY
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To order this title, and for more information, click here
Edited By
William Menasco, University at Buffalo, New York, USA
Morwen Thistlethwaite, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
Reviews
CHOICE – September 2006
Handbook of Knot Theory, ed. By William Menasco and Morwen Thistlethwaite. Elsevier, 2005. 492 p bibl indexes
ISBN 044451452X, $138.00
Another title, perhaps ?Surveys of Recent Advances in Knot Theory? might better suit this book. ?Handbook?
suggests, say, tabulations of those knots with few crossings in various classes, listed with their properties and invariants, everything
supplemented by specifications of useful algorithms and key theorems that capture such regularities as emerge from all the data. But
the era of such a handbook has passed. Indeed, the chapter by J. Hoste describes the state of the art concerning know enumeration. Although
we lack an efficient, general recognition algorithm, existing techniques will classify the billions of distinct knots up to 20 crossings,
and the mere dissemination of the results requires digital means and ingenuity. Other chapters will also immediately invite undergraduates,
especially chapters by J.S. Burman and T.E. Brendle on braids, and L.H. Kauffman on knot diagrammatics. Overall, the ten chapters represent
distinct views of the subject by some of its leading experts. More advanced students may read chapters by C. Adams and J. Weeks about
hyperbolic (complements of) knots for an excellent entree into Thurston?s geometrization program, or chapters G. Friedman and C. Livingston
about spheres knotting in four-dimensional space, an intriguing topic rarely treated outside the journal literature. SUMMING UP: Highly
recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates through professionals. – D.V. Feldman, University of New Hampshire
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