ALERT: This system is being upgraded on Tuesday December 12. It will not be available
for use for several hours that day while the upgrade is in progress. Deposits to DukeSpace
will be disabled on Monday December 11, so no new items are to be added to the repository
while the upgrade is in progress. Everything should be back to normal by the end of
day, December 12.
Higher genus knot contact homology and recursion for colored HOMFLY-PT polynomials
Repository Usage Stats
89
views
views
16
downloads
downloads
Abstract
We sketch a construction of Legendrian Symplectic Field Theory (SFT) for
conormal tori of knots and links. Using large $N$ duality and Witten's
connection between open Gromov-Witten invariants and Chern-Simons gauge theory,
we relate the SFT of a link conormal to the colored HOMFLY-PT polynomials of
the link. We present an argument that the HOMFLY-PT wave function is determined
from SFT by induction on Euler characteristic, and also show how to, more
directly, extract its recursion relation by elimination theory applied to
finitely many noncommutative equations. The latter can be viewed as the higher
genus counterpart of the relation between the augmentation variety and
Gromov-Witten disk potentials established by Aganagic, Vafa, and the authors,
and, from this perspective, our results can be seen as an SFT approach to
quantizing the augmentation variety.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17783Collections
More Info
Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Lenhard Lee Ng
Professor of Mathematics
My research mainly focuses on symplectic topology and low-dimensional topology. I
am interested in studying structures in symplectic and contact geometry (Weinstein
manifolds, contact manifolds, Legendrian and transverse knots), especially through
holomorphic-curve techniques. One particular interest is extracting topological information
about knots through cotangent bundles, and exploring relations to topological string
theory. I have also worked in Heegaard Floer theory, quantum topology, and

Articles written by Duke faculty are made available through the campus open access policy. For more information see: Duke Open Access Policy
Rights for Collection: Scholarly Articles
Works are deposited here by their authors, and represent their research and opinions, not that of Duke University. Some materials and descriptions may include offensive content. More info