Not Knot
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Not Knot is a 16-minute film on the mathematics of knot theory and low-dimensional topology, centered on and titled after the concept of a knot complement. It was produced in 1991 by mathematicians at the Geometry Center at the University of Minnesota, directed by Charlie Gunn and Delle Maxwell, and distributed on videotape with a 48-page paperback booklet of supplementary material by A K Peters.
The video is structured into three parts.[1] It begins by introducing knots, links, and their classification,[2] using the trefoil knot, figure-eight knot, and Borromean rings as examples.[3] It then describes the construction of two-dimensional surfaces such as cones and cylinders by gluing together the edges of flat sheets of paper, the internal geometry of the resulting manifolds or orbifolds, and the behavior of light rays within them.[1][4] Finally, it uses a three-dimensional version of the same construction method to focus in more depth on the link complement of the Borromean rings and on the hyperbolic geometry of this complementary space, which has a high degree of symmetry and is closely related to classical uniform polyhedra.[2][5] The view of this space, constructed as the limit of a process of pushing the rings out "to infinity", is immersive, rendered and lit accurately, "like flying through hyperbolic space".[2]
The supplementary material includes a complete script of the video, with black-and-white reproductions of many of its frames, accompanied by explanations at two levels, one set aimed at high school students and another at more advanced mathematics students at the late undergraduate or early graduate level.[3]