Peripheral subgroup

In algebraic topology, a peripheral subgroup for a space-subspace pair X  Y is a certain subgroup of the fundamental group of the complementary space, π1(X  Y). Its conjugacy class is an invariant of the pair (X,Y). That is, any homeomorphism (X, Y)  (X′, Y′) induces an isomorphism π1(X  Y)  π1(X  Y′) taking peripheral subgroups to peripheral subgroups.

A peripheral subgroup consists of loops in X  Y which are peripheral to Y, that is, which stay "close to" Y (except when passing to and from the basepoint). When an ordered set of generators for a peripheral subgroup is specified, the subgroup and generators are collectively called a peripheral system for the pair (X, Y).

Peripheral systems are used in knot theory as a complete algebraic invariant of knots. There is a systematic way to choose generators for a peripheral subgroup of a knot in 3-space, such that distinct knot types always have algebraically distinct peripheral systems. The generators in this situation are called a longitude and a meridian of the knot complement.

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