The same text as in this README file is available (with illustrations) at http://lewark.de/lukas/khoca.html
Khoca is computer program to calculate sl(N)-homology of knots. The program has been written for joint projects with Andrew Lobb such as [3, 4]. The paper [3] also contains a description of the algorithm used by khoca. The main innovation is to use Krasner's calculation of the sl(N)-homology of the basic two-crossing tangle [2] for calculations of the homology of bipartite knots.
Khoca calculates the following:
- Khovanov sl(2)-homology of arbitrary links, given as a braid or in PD code.
- Khovanov-Rozansky sl(N)-homology with N > 2 of bipartite knots, given by a certain encoding of a matched diagram of the knot (see [3] and section "Encoding of matched diagrams" below).
- Homology over the integers, the rationals or a prime field.
- Either equivariant homology, or homology with an arbitrary fixed potential.
- All pages of the spectral sequence of filtered homology over a field.
- Reduced and unreduced homology.
- Homology of sums and mirror images of knots.
You are encouraged to contact me with any kind of questions or comments regarding khoca. If you are using khoca for a project or publication, please cite this web page, or the paper [3].
Binaries for Linux are available for download from http://lewark.de/lukas/khoca.html They should run on any Linux installation that has python3.6. Binaries for Windows or Mac are not available at the moment.
The source code, including instructions on how to compile it, is available at the GitHub repository khoca: https://github.com/LLewark/khoca
To run Khoca in Docker type:
docker run -it soehms/khoca:latest
Its download size is 162 MB and it will need 516 MB of disk space on your device. To create a new (resp. locally own) Docker image cd to the khoca directory type
docker build -f Dockerfile --tag khoca:<your_tag> .
If your machine has an older CPU it can happen that you get Illegal Instruction
errors. In that case you better should use the image soehms/khoca:old_cpu
.
To use the program, run khoca.py (a python3 script) from the command line. khoca.py takes three arguments:
-
The coefficient ring;
0
for integers,1
for rationals, a primep
for the corresponding finite field. -
A sequence of N integers
a_0, ..., a_{N-1}
separated by a non-digit character, defining the Frobenius algebraF[X]/(X^N + a_{N-1}X^{N-1} + ... + a_0)
. Alternatively,e
followed by a numberN
for equivariant computation oversl(N)
. For example,-1.0.0
gives the Frobenius algebraF[X]/(X3 - 1)
. -
A root of the polynomial given in 2. for the calculation of reduced homology (for the dependence of reduced homology on a root, see [3]). For example, to get the standard graded reduced homology, use 0 as root. If you are not interested in reduced homology, it does not matter what root you chose (and khoca does not check that the number is actually a root).
The option -p
will show progress bars, -v
will give more verbose
non-mathematical information, and -h
will print a short help text. Each
argument after the first three arguments, can be one of the following.
-
BraidX
calculates homology of a link given as closure of the braidX
, formatted as in knotscape (a
= first Artin generator,A
= its inverse,b
= second Artin generator, etc.). This works only forsl(2)
homology, otherwise output is nonsensical. -
PdX
calculates homology of a link given in PD notation (as e.g. given on KnotInfo). Again, this works only forsl(2)
homology, otherwise output is nonsensical. -
GaussX
calculates homology of a bipartite knot given as a matched diagram, following the convention explained in the section below. This works forsl(N)
homology for allN
. -
MirrorX
takes the dual of the result at spotX
. -
SumXY
computes the homology of the connected sum of the results saved at spotsX
andY
(numbers separated by a non-digit character). -
CalcX
outputs the result saved at spotX
. If you forget this command, the program will have no output.
The program keeps a stack of computed homologies, enumerated 0,1,2... . Each of the commands 1 - 5 puts a new homology on that stack, whereas the command 6. prints the homology at a certain spot. This is mainly useful to compute homology of sums of knots.
Here are some examples:
./khoca.py 0 0.0 0 braidaBaB calc0
calculates the classical sl(2)
Khovanov homology (both reduced and unreduced)
of the closure of the braid aBaB
(knotscape notation), i.e. the figure-eight
knot.
./khoca.py 0 e2 0 pd[[4,2,5,1],[8,6,1,5],[6,3,7,4],[2,7,3,8]] calc0
calculates integral equivariant sl(2)
homology of the figure-eight knot.
./khoca.py 7 0.-1 0 braidabcdefabcdefabcdefabcdefabcdefabcdefabcdefabcdef
calc0 -p
calculates Khovanov homology of the (7,8)
-torus knot over F7
with perturbed
potential, displaying progress bars. This calculation takes roughly two
minutes, and shows that the spectral sequence does not collapse on the second
page, refuting the knight-move conjecture over finite fields (cf. [1]).
./converters/montesinos.py [1/5,1/3,-1/2]
outputs [12,4,16,10,15,9,14,13]
, the code for a matched diagram of the
(5,3,-2)
-pretzel knot, aka the (3,5)
-torus knot, aka 10_{124}
. So
./khoca.py 1 1.0.0.0.0 0 gauss[12,4,16,10,15,9,14,13] calc0 calculates
rational sl(5)
homology and the corresponding Rasmussen invariant of the (3,5)
torus knot.
./khoca.py 1 1.0 0 braidaaa dual0 sum0+1 braidaBaB sum2+3 calc4
calculates sl(2)
homology of the sum of the trefoil, its mirror image and a figure-8-knot.
This section describes how to encode a matched knot diagram, i.e. a diagram
that consists of n
copies of the basic 2-crossing tangle. Resolving each basic
tangle into two intervals and a chord results in a single circle with n
non-intersecting (red) chords, which may be on either side of the circle.
Enumerate the 2n
chord endpoints by walking around the circle. If a chord
connects the points i
and j
, let f(i) = j
. Write down the list f(1), f(2), ..., f(2n)
omitting f(i)
if f(i) < i
. Moreover, make the list entries signed, and
let the sign reflect the sign of the two crossings of the corresponding
2-crossing tangle. This list of n
non-zero integers uniquely determines the
matched diagram. As an example, the standard diagram of 6_1
is matched and
encoded as [-4,6,5]
.
"Half" of Montesinos knots are bipartite [3]. You may use the python3 script
./converters/montesinos.py
to obtain the encoding of a matched diagram of
Montesinos knots.
[1] Bar-Natan: Fast Khovanov Homology Computations, Journal of Knot Theory and its Ramifications 16 (2007), no.3, pp. 243-255, arXiv:math/0606318, MR2320156.
[2] Daniel Krasner: A computation in Khovanov-Rozansky Homology, Fundamenta Mathematicae 203 (2009), pp. 75-95, arXiv:0801.4018, MR2491784.
[3] Lukas Lewark and Andrew Lobb: New Quantum Obstructions to Sliceness, Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 112 (2016), no. 1, pp. 81-114, arXiv:1501.07138, MR3458146.
[4] Lukas Lewark and Andrew Lobb: Upsilon-like concordance invariants from sl(n) knot cohomology, arXiv:1707.00891.
Lukas Lewark, 2018