Vol. 191, No. 1, 1999

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R. Fenn & M.T. Greene & D. Rolfsen & C. Rourke & B. Wiest

Abstract

We give an explicit geometric argument that Artin’s braid group Bn is right-orderable. The construction is elementary, natural, and leads to a new, effectively computable, canonical form for braids which we call left-consistent canonical form. The left-consistent form of a braid which is positive (respectively negative) in our order has consistently positive (respectively negative) exponent in the smallest braid generator which occurs. It follows that our ordering is identical to that of Dehornoy (1995) constructed by very different means, and we recover Dehornoy’s main theorem that any braid can be put into such a form using either positive or negative exponent in the smallest generator but not both.

Our definition of order is strongly connected with Mosher’s (1995) normal form and this leads to an algorithm to decide whether a given braid is positive, trivial, or negative which is quadratic in the length of the braid word.

Authors
R. Fenn
University of Sussex
Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QH
UK
M.T. Greene
Radan Computational, Ensleigh House
Granville Road, Bath BA1 9BE
UK
D. Rolfsen
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z2
Canada
C. Rourke
University of Warwick
Coventry CV4 7AL
UK
B. Wiest
CMI, Université de Provence
13453 Marseille cedex 13
France