Ambient isotopy

Summary

In the mathematical subject of topology, an ambient isotopy, also called an h-isotopy, is a kind of continuous distortion of an ambient space, for example a manifold, taking a submanifold to another submanifold. For example in knot theory, one considers two knots the same if one can distort one knot into the other without breaking it. Such a distortion is an example of an ambient isotopy. More precisely, let and be manifolds and and be embeddings of in . A continuous map

In , the unknot is not ambient-isotopic to the trefoil knot since one cannot be deformed into the other through a continuous path of homeomorphisms of the ambient space. They are ambient-isotopic in .

is defined to be an ambient isotopy taking to if is the identity map, each map is a homeomorphism from to itself, and . This implies that the orientation must be preserved by ambient isotopies. For example, two knots that are mirror images of each other are, in general, not equivalent.

See also edit

References edit

  • M. A. Armstrong, Basic Topology, Springer-Verlag, 1983
  • Sasho Kalajdzievski, An Illustrated Introduction to Topology and Homotopy, CRC Press, 2010, Chapter 10: Isotopy and Homotopy