Bounding the Kirby-Thompson invariant of spun knots
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 13:12 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The Kirby-Thompson invariant of the spun trefoil equals 15.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors prove that a particular bridge trisection of the spun trefoil has disc sets whose distances in the pants complex yield a Kirby-Thompson invariant of exactly 15, supplying the first significant bounds for any spun knot.
What carries the argument
The Kirby-Thompson invariant of a bridge trisection, obtained as the maximum of the three pairwise distances between the disc sets in the pants complex of the trisection surface.
If this is right
- The Kirby-Thompson invariant is finite for at least one nontrivial spun knot.
- Explicit numerical values rather than abstract existence bounds are now available for this class of surfaces.
- The same distance-computation technique applies directly to other spun knots whose bridge trisections are known.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same method may produce explicit values for the invariants of spun versions of other classical knots.
- If 15 turns out to be minimal, it would give a lower bound on the trisection complexity of that particular surface in four-space.
- The result suggests that pants-complex distances can serve as a practical computational tool for other four-dimensional knot invariants.
Load-bearing premise
The chosen bridge trisection of the spun trefoil admits disc sets whose pairwise pants-complex distances are precisely those that produce the number 15.
What would settle it
Discovery of any bridge trisection of the spun trefoil in which the maximum pairwise distance among the three disc sets is strictly less than 15.
Figures
read the original abstract
A bridge trisection of a smooth surface in $S^4$ is a decomposition analogous to a bridge splitting of a link in $S^3$. The Kirby-Thompson invariant of a bridge trisection measures its complexity in terms of distances between disc sets in the pants complex of the trisection surface. We give the first significant bounds for the Kirby-Thompson invariant of spun knots. In particular, we show that the Kirby-Thompson invariant of the spun trefoil is 15.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript defines the Kirby-Thompson invariant of a bridge trisection of a surface in S^4 via distances in the pants complex of the trisection surface. It constructs explicit bridge trisections for spun knots and computes pairwise distances between the associated disc sets, establishing that the invariant of the spun trefoil equals 15 and supplying upper and lower bounds for other spun knots.
Significance. If the distance calculations hold, the work supplies the first explicit non-trivial values of the Kirby-Thompson invariant for any infinite family of knotted surfaces. The concrete computation for the spun trefoil furnishes a benchmark that can be used to test future trisection constructions or to compare with other 4-dimensional invariants.
minor comments (3)
- §3, Figure 2: the labeling of the three disc sets D1, D2, D3 on the trisection surface is not indicated on the diagram; adding arrows or a legend would make the distance computation in the subsequent paragraph easier to follow.
- §4.2, paragraph after Eq. (3): the phrase 'the minimal distance is realized by the curves shown' should cite the specific curves in the pants complex rather than referring only to the figure.
- The bibliography is missing the reference to the original definition of the pants complex distance used in the distance formula; add the appropriate citation.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript, including the recognition that it supplies the first explicit non-trivial values of the Kirby-Thompson invariant for an infinite family of knotted surfaces and that the computation for the spun trefoil provides a useful benchmark. The recommendation for minor revision is noted. No major comments appear in the report, so we address none point-by-point below.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The paper's central result is a direct computational bound obtained by constructing an explicit bridge trisection of the spun trefoil and calculating pairwise distances between disc sets in the pants complex to arrive at the value 15. No equation, definition, or cited premise reduces the claimed invariant value to a fitted parameter, self-referential definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain; the derivation is self-contained against the external definition of the Kirby-Thompson invariant and the pants complex.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Bounds for Kirby-Thompson invariants of knotted surfaces
Sharp lower bounds and exact computations for two Kirby-Thompson invariants of knotted surfaces with bridge number ≤6.
Reference graph
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