Braids in trivial braid diagrams
- Published in 2003
- Added on
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We show that every trivial 3-strand braid diagram contains a disk, defined as a ribbon ending in opposed crossings. Under a convenient algebraic form, the result extends to every Artin--Tits group of dihedral type, but it fails to extend to braids with 4 strands and more. The proof uses a partition of the Cayley graph and a continuity argument.
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- key
- Braidsintrivialbraiddiagrams
- type
- article
- date_added
- 2026-04-10
- date_published
- 2003-04-10
BibTeX entry
@article{Braidsintrivialbraiddiagrams,
key = {Braidsintrivialbraiddiagrams},
type = {article},
title = {Braids in trivial braid diagrams},
author = {Patrick Dehornoy},
abstract = {We show that every trivial 3-strand braid diagram contains a disk, defined as a ribbon ending in opposed crossings. Under a convenient algebraic form, the result extends to every Artin--Tits group of dihedral type, but it fails to extend to braids with 4 strands and more. The proof uses a partition of the Cayley graph and a continuity argument.},
comment = {},
date_added = {2026-04-10},
date_published = {2003-04-10},
urls = {https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0311326v1,https://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0311326v1},
collections = {fun-maths-facts,the-groups-group,things-to-make-and-do},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0311326v1 https://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0311326v1},
year = 2003,
urldate = {2026-04-10},
archivePrefix = {arXiv},
eprint = {math/0311326},
primaryClass = {math.GT}
}