PCMI/Graduate Summer School 2006/Introduction to Link Homology
The core of these notes were taken by Gabriel C. Drummond-Cole at the PCMI 2006 Graduate Summer School. A link to his original notes can be found in the references.
Lecure 1
It's time to begin. I'd like to welcome you here on behalf of half of the organizers. The other half is still in the air. I have a couple of announcements. First thing is that the problem sessions for today are cancelled because you guys don't know enough yet. The other thing is that there will be an organizational meeting today at 9:40 for the research program. There's a TA meeting at 7:45 tonight. Both of those are here. That's all the announcement. This is our first lecturer, M. Khovanov from Columbia.
I'd like to thank the organizers. I'll give six lectures. I plan to spend the first two discussing braid actions on categories. Most of the time will be spent on one particular action. I want to discuss invariants of braid cobordisms. The last four I'll talk about link homology.
I'm going to do some preparation that will be algebraic but will become more topological as we go on.
We'll start with path rings. Let be an oriented graph, with finitely many vertices and edges. It may have loops. The path ring is the free Abelian group of with all paths as a basis.
So for the graph
there are six paths, one of length two, two of length one and three of length zero. Multiplication is by concatenation of paths. Most products in this ring are zero because they don't compose.
We have the paths and Then we have with and then and is
Ex 1: Note that the sum of the zero length paths over all vertices is the unit.
Note that the path ring on a loop is
I'd like to say a few words about modules over path rings. I'll talk about the category of right -modules. Then Now if you multiply by you get a map from to
Ex 2: What are morphisms in this language?
Ex 3: Describe the analogous structure for left modules.
Another thing you can do is, people like to put a field instead of and then this algebra has homological dimension one so every module is projective.
Something about, say is a hereditary ring (homological dimension one)
We want also to quotient the path ring by relations. If there is more than one path between vertices, you can quotient by the relation This is too general.
The case we care about is zigzag rings,
And then the relations we want to add are and We can write this as and where are arrows to the right, left, respctively. So modules are the same as bicomplexes, complexes with two commuting differentials. Note also that
Now $\mathbb{Z}\Gamma$ is graded by path length. The relations quotiented in is also graded since the relations are homogeneous.
Any length three path is zero. A subpath which contains two steps to the right or left it's zero, and So is small. It's a free Abelian group on the paths and and the paths
So from we will get a braid group action by means of the Temperley-Lieb algebra.
Take which is spanned by paths that end at When is in the middle, there are four such paths, one each of lengths zero and two and two of lengths one: and
This is left-projective, because they are direct summands,
Likewise we can define as and this is a right projective module. There is a similar decomposition. If you take you get an Abelian group spanned by paths that start at and end at Most of the time this is zero, that is if It's $\mathbb{Z}(i|j)$ if $j=i\pm 1.$ If $i=j$ there are two paths, the zero path and $X_i$ so the tensor product is
Introduce This is an -bimodule. If you tensor So you get where these are for and So this is
Then decomposes into six terms and what's left will be Similarly for When you tensor and when they are far away from one another () you get zero.
These relations are the Temporley-Lieb algebra with some additional relations.
This algebra is generated by diagrams where there are vertical lines and cups and caps in positions You say a circle gives multiplication by The less interesting picture is to set and multiply by So If you multiply you get isotopically. You have for far from one another, but you don't get that these are equal to zero.
This is just an algebra with generators and relations, but it has this nice geometric picture. Now you are taking tensor products instead of multiplications, and the equalities are isomorphisms. So we're lifting the equations of the Temperley-Lieb algebra.
The braid group has generators which go to This middle map takes to I'll talk about this at length.
Let be any ring. Denote by the category of complexes of -modules. We take the quotient category, (the principle is that you have to modify morphisms) with the same objects, but where in the quotient category if the difference is nullhomotopic. What this means for complexes of modules is:
In this diagram, we have $t$ is nullhomotopic if there exists $h$ with $t=dh+hd$ Ex 4: Nullhomotopic morphisms form an ideal in
So is the quotient category. Ex 5: For any and are isomorphic in
Let be the left shift operator, namely let and
Then let the cone for be with differential
For a bimodule and a module we have a module, so is a functor from to If and are complexes of bimodules, modules, resepectively, then is a complex of modules via
just taking the total differential.
Theorem: There are isomorphisms \\ for and \\
Ex 6: We need to be the complex with representing the inverse of
The theorem fails in but holds in the homotopy category of complexes of bimodules. \\ This action is faithful.
The tensor product can be viewed at a functor and so equivalences in the braid group become isomorphisms of functors.
This is striking, why would we have an action and why would it be faithful? This is related to tricomplexes. We have with and when we deal with complexes we have the additional So we have tricomplexes up to homotopy and in this category we have a faithful action of the braid group.
So far beyond this, in four-complexes, I have seen nothing interesting. Bicomplexes correspond to spectral sequences and tricomplexes to the braid group action. I don't know about four.
References



