3 1 Further Notes and Views: Difference between revisions

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{{Knot View Template|
{{Knot View Template|
image = RopeTrick_160.jpg |
image = Trefoil-square-centerline.png |
text = Visually fancier square trefoil|
text = Mike Hutchings' Rope Trick [http://www.math.toronto.edu/~drorbn/Gallery/KnottedObjects/RopeTrick/index.html]|
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}}
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{{Knot View Template|
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image = Auryn_120.gif |
image = Auryn_120.gif |
text = The NeverEnding Story logo is a connected sum of two trefoils. [http://www.thealmightyguru.com/Reviews/NeverendingStory/NeverendingStory.html]|
text = The NeverEnding Story logo is a connected sum of two trefoils. [http://www.thealmightyguru.com/Reviews/NeverendingStory/NeverendingStory.html]|
}}
{{Knot View Template|
image = RopeTrick_160.jpg |
text = Mike Hutchings' Rope Trick [http://www.math.toronto.edu/~drorbn/Gallery/KnottedObjects/RopeTrick/index.html]|
}}
}}
{{Knot View Template|
{{Knot View Template|

Revision as of 09:39, 2 June 2011

The trefoil is perhaps the easiest knot to find in "nature", and is topologically equivalent to the interlaced form of the common Christian and pagan "triquetra" symbol [12]:

Logo of Caixa Geral de Depositos, Lisboa [1]
A knot consists of two harts in Kolam [2]
A basic form of the interlaced Triquetra; as a Christian symbol, it refers to the Trinity
3D depiction