Dehornoy order
In the mathematical area of braid theory, the Dehornoy order is a left-invariant total order on the braid group, found by Patrick Dehornoy (1994, 1995).
Dehornoy's original discovery of the order on the braid group used huge cardinals, but there are now several more elementary constructions of it.
Definition
Suppose that σ1, ..., σn−1 are the usual generators of the braid group Bn on n strings.
The set P of positive elements in the Dehornoy order is defined to be the elements that can be written as word in the elements σ1, ..., σn−1 and their inverses, such that for some i the word contains σi but does not contain
σ
j±1 for j < i
nor σ
i−1.
The set P has the properties PP ⊆ P, and the braid group is a disjoint union of P, 1, and P−1. These properties imply that if we define a < b to mean a−1b ∈ P then we get a left-invariant total order on the braid group.
Properties
The Dehornoy order is a well-ordering when restricted to the monoid generated by σ1, ..., σn−1.
References
- Dehornoy, Patrick (1994), "Braid groups and left distributive operations", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 345 (1): 115–150, doi:10.2307/2154598, ISSN 0002-9947, MR 1214782
- Dehornoy, Patrick (1995), "From large cardinals to braids via distributive algebra", Journal of Knot Theory and its Ramifications, 4 (1): 33–79, doi:10.1142/S0218216595000041, ISSN 0218-2165, MR 1321290
Further reading
- Dehornoy, Patrick; Dynnikov, Ivan; Rolfsen, Dale; Wiest, Bert (2002), Why are braids orderable? (PDF), Panoramas et Synthèses, 14, Paris: Société Mathématique de France, ISBN 978-2-85629-135-1, MR 1988550
- Dehornoy, Patrick; Dynnikov, Ivan; Rolfsen, Dale; Wiest, Bert (2008), Ordering braids, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, 148, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-4431-1, MR 2463428