The Coloured Jones Polynomials

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KnotTheory` can compute the coloured Jones polynomial of braid closures, using the same formulas as in [Garoufalidis Le]:

(For In[1] see Setup)

In[1]:= ?ColouredJones
ColouredJones[br, n][q] computes the coloured Jones polynomial of the closure of the braid br in colour n (i.e., in the (n+1)-dimensional representation) and with respect to the variable q. ColouredJones[K, n][q] does the same for knots for which a braid representative is known to this program.
In[2]:= ColouredJones::about
The ColouredJones program was written jointly with Stavros Garoufalidis, based on formulas provided to us by Thang Le.

Thus, for example, here's the coloured Jones polynomial of the knot 4_1 in the 4-dimensional representation of :

In[3]:= ColouredJones[Knot[4, 1], 3][q]
Out[3]= -12 -11 -10 2 2 3 3 2 4 6 3 + q - q - q + -- - -- + -- - -- - 3 q + 3 q - 2 q + 8 6 4 2 q q q q 8 10 11 12 2 q - q - q + q

And here's the coloured Jones polynomial of the same knot in the two dimensional representation of ; this better be equal to the ordinary Jones polynomial of 4_1!

In[4]:= ColouredJones[Knot[4, 1], 1][q]
Out[4]= -2 1 2 1 + q - - - q + q q
In[5]:= Jones[Knot[4, 1]][q]
Out[5]= -2 1 2 1 + q - - - q + q q
In[6]:= ?CJ`Summand
CJ`Summand[br, n] returned a pair {s, vars} where s is the summand in the the big sum that makes up ColouredJones[br, n][q] and where vars is the list of variables that need to be summed over (from 0 to n) to get ColouredJones[br, n][q]. CJ`Summand[K, n] is the same for knots for which a braid representative is known to this program.

The coloured Jones polynomial of 3_1 is computed via a single summation. Indeed,

In[7]:= s = CJ`Summand[Mirror[Knot[3, 1]], n]
Out[7]= (3 n)/2 + n CJ`k[1] + (-n + 2 CJ`k[1])/2 1 {CJ`q qBinomial[0, 0, ----] CJ`q 1 1 qBinomial[CJ`k[1], 0, ----] qBinomial[CJ`k[1], CJ`k[1], ----] CJ`q CJ`q n 1 n 1 qPochhammer[CJ`q , ----, 0] qPochhammer[CJ`q , ----, CJ`k[1]] CJ`q CJ`q n - CJ`k[1] 1 qPochhammer[CJ`q , ----, 0], {CJ`k[1]}} CJ`q

The symbols in the above formula require a definition:

In[8]:= ?qPochhammer
qPochhammer[a, q, k] represents the q-shifted factorial of a in base q with index k. See Eric Weisstein's http://mathworld.wolfram.com/q-PochhammerSymbol.html and Axel Riese's www.risc.uni-linz.ac.at/research/combinat/risc/software/qMultiSum/
In[9]:= ?qBinomial
qBinomial[n, k, q] represents the q-binomial coefficient of n and k in base q. For k<0 it is 0; otherwise it is qPochhammer[q^(n-k+1), q, k] / qPochhammer[q, q, k].

More precisely, qPochhammer[a, q, k] is

and qBinomial[n, k, q] is

The function qExpand replaces every occurence of a qPochhammer[a, q, k] symbol or a qBinomial[n, k, q] symbol by its definition:

In[10]:= ?qExpand
qExpand[expr_] replaces all occurences of qPochhammer and qBinomial in expr by their definitions as products. See the documentation for qPochhammer and for qBinomial for details.

Hence,

In[11]:= qPochhammer[a, q, 6] // qExpand
Out[11]= 2 3 4 5 (-1 + a) (-1 + a q) (-1 + a q ) (-1 + a q ) (-1 + a q ) (-1 + a q )
In[12]:= First[s] /. {n -> 3, CJ`k[1] -> 2} // qExpand
Out[12]= 11 2 3 CJ`q (-1 + CJ`q ) (-1 + CJ`q )

Finally,


In[13]:= ?ColoredJones
Type ColoredJones and see for yourself.

[Garoufalidis Le] ^  S. Garoufalidis and T. Q. T. Le, The Colored Jones Function is -Holonomic, Georgia Institute of Technology preprint, September 2003, arXiv:math.GT/0309214.