3 1 Further Notes and Views: Difference between revisions
From Knot Atlas
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 103: | Line 103: | ||
Image:Trefoil-of-trefoils.png|Three trefoils along a closed loop which itself is knotted as a trefoil. |
Image:Trefoil-of-trefoils.png|Three trefoils along a closed loop which itself is knotted as a trefoil. |
||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
For a configuration of two trefoils along a closed loop which is prime, see [[10 120]]. |
|||
</div></div> |
</div></div> |
||
<br clear=left> |
<br clear=left> |
||
Revision as of 04:17, 4 March 2010
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] |
Thurston's Trefoil - Figure Eight Trick [3] |
Further images...
A Knotted Box [4] |
A trefoil near the Hollander York Gallery [5] |
A Knotted Pencil [6] |
The NeverEnding Story is a connected sum of two trefoils. [7] |
Banco Do Brasil [8] |
A hagfish tying itself in a knot to escape capture. [9] |
A Kenyan Stone [10] | |
Mike Hutchings' Rope Trick [11] |
Non-prime (compound) versions
For a configuration of two trefoils along a closed loop which is prime, see 10 120.
























