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arxiv: 2510.02095 · v2 · pith:GLVNYGWWnew · submitted 2025-10-02 · 🧮 math.GT

Exact integral formulas for volumes of two-bridge knot cone-manifolds

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 11:53 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.GT
keywords two-bridge knotscone-manifoldshyperbolic volumespherical volumeChebyshev polynomialstwist knotsintegral formulas3-sphere
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The pith

Exact integral formulas are given for hyperbolic and spherical volumes of cone-manifolds whose singular sets are three infinite families of two-bridge knots in the 3-sphere.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper derives exact integral expressions for the volumes of hyperbolic and spherical cone-manifolds whose underlying space is the 3-sphere and whose singular sets belong to the knot families C(2n,2), C(2n,3), and C(2n,-2n) for nonzero integer n. These expressions take the form of integrals of explicit rational functions built from Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, with the integration limits fixed by roots of algebraic equations that depend on the cone angles and knot parameters. A sympathetic reader would care because earlier results supplied only implicit formulas that required numerical approximation, so the new formulas supply direct, exact representations instead. The work covers twist knots as the special case C(2n,2) and extends the same method uniformly across the three families.

Core claim

The volumes of hyperbolic and spherical cone-manifolds with singular sets from the families C(2n,2), C(2n,3), and C(2n,-2n) are given by integrals of explicit rational functions involving Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, where the integration limits are roots of algebraic equations determined by the cone angles and knot parameters. This supplies closed-form integral representations that replace the implicit equations known from prior work.

What carries the argument

Integral representations of volume built from rational functions of Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, with limits given by algebraic roots tied to cone angles.

If this is right

  • Volumes become computable by direct quadrature rather than by solving implicit equations numerically.
  • The same integral method applies uniformly to all three infinite knot families for any nonzero integer n.
  • Both hyperbolic and spherical geometries receive exact formulas under the same construction.
  • The integration limits are determined algebraically from the cone angles, allowing parameter dependence to be tracked explicitly.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same technique of building rational integrands from Chebyshev polynomials could be tested on other two-bridge knot families not covered here.
  • If the integrals admit closed antiderivatives in special cases, they might produce new algebraic relations among knot volumes.
  • Direct comparison of the integrals against tabulated volumes for small n would provide an immediate consistency check.

Load-bearing premise

The volumes of these cone-manifolds can be expressed as integrals of the stated rational functions whose limits are algebraic roots.

What would settle it

Numerical evaluation of one of the new integrals for a concrete n and cone angle that fails to match the volume obtained by solving the corresponding implicit equation or by direct hyperbolic geometry software.

read the original abstract

We provide exact integral formulas for hyperbolic and spherical volumes of cone-manifolds whose underlying space is the $3$-sphere and whose singular set belongs to three infinite families of two-bridge knots: $C(2n,2)$ (twist knots), $C(2n,3)$, and $C(2n,-2n)$ for any non-zero integer $n$. Our formulas express volumes as integrals of explicit rational functions involving Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, with integration limits determined by roots of algebraic equations. This extends previous work where only implicit formulas requiring numerical approximation were known.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript derives exact integral formulas for the hyperbolic and spherical volumes of cone-manifolds on the 3-sphere whose singular sets are the three infinite families of two-bridge knots C(2n,2), C(2n,3), and C(2n,-2n) for nonzero integer n. Volumes are expressed as integrals of explicit rational functions built from Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, with limits given by roots of algebraic equations in the cone angle and knot parameters. This extends earlier implicit formulas that required numerical approximation.

Significance. If the formulas and root selections are correct, the work supplies explicit integral representations that replace implicit ones, offering a concrete computational and algebraic tool for volumes in these families. The systematic use of Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind connects the volume expressions to the known algebraic structure of the representation varieties for two-bridge knots.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3.2, Eq. (8)] §3.2, Eq. (8) and the subsequent root-selection rule for the C(2n,3) family: the algebraic equation whose roots determine the integration limits admits multiple real solutions for |n| > 1 and cone angles near the spherical-hyperbolic transition; the manuscript does not supply an explicit branch-selection criterion or a numerical cross-check against the prior implicit volume formula for even one nontrivial case (e.g., n=2, cone angle 2π/3). This choice is load-bearing for the claim that the integral recovers the geometric volume.
  2. [§4.1] §4.1, the derivation of the rational integrand for the twist-knot family C(2n,2): the reduction from the holonomy representation to the Chebyshev expression assumes a particular normalization of the meridian-longitude coordinates that is not re-verified for the spherical regime; if this normalization fails to match the geometric volume for some interval of angles, the integral computes a different quantity.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] The statement of the main theorems (Theorem 1.1 and Theorem 1.2) would benefit from an explicit sentence clarifying that the integrals are taken along the real line between the chosen roots and that the integrand is positive in the hyperbolic range.
  2. [§2] Notation for the Chebyshev polynomial of the second kind U_k(x) is introduced without recalling its recurrence or explicit formula; adding a short reminder in §2 would improve readability for readers outside the immediate subfield.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable comments on our manuscript. We address each of the major comments below and indicate the revisions we will make.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3.2, Eq. (8)] §3.2, Eq. (8) and the subsequent root-selection rule for the C(2n,3) family: the algebraic equation whose roots determine the integration limits admits multiple real solutions for |n| > 1 and cone angles near the spherical-hyperbolic transition; the manuscript does not supply an explicit branch-selection criterion or a numerical cross-check against the prior implicit volume formula for even one nontrivial case (e.g., n=2, cone angle 2π/3). This choice is load-bearing for the claim that the integral recovers the geometric volume.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit branch-selection criterion would strengthen the presentation. In the revised manuscript, we will specify that the appropriate root is the one for which the associated representation is irreducible and the volume is positive, selected by continuity from the hyperbolic limit as the cone angle varies. Additionally, we will include a numerical cross-check for the case n=2 and cone angle 2π/3, comparing the integral value to the volume obtained from the implicit formula in previous literature. This addresses the concern directly. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§4.1] §4.1, the derivation of the rational integrand for the twist-knot family C(2n,2): the reduction from the holonomy representation to the Chebyshev expression assumes a particular normalization of the meridian-longitude coordinates that is not re-verified for the spherical regime; if this normalization fails to match the geometric volume for some interval of angles, the integral computes a different quantity.

    Authors: The normalization of the meridian and longitude coordinates in §4.1 follows the standard conventions established for the hyperbolic structures of two-bridge knots, which are independent of the specific geometry (hyperbolic or spherical). The derivation relies on the algebraic structure of the representation variety, which remains valid across the regimes. To confirm, we will add a short paragraph in the revision verifying that the same coordinate normalization yields the correct spherical volume by examining the behavior as the cone angle approaches 2π from below, where the volume tends to zero consistently. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: explicit integral formulas derived from algebraic geometry of representation varieties, extending prior implicit expressions without reduction to fitted inputs or self-referential definitions.

full rationale

The paper derives explicit integral formulas for cone-manifold volumes by expressing them as integrals of rational functions built from Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, with limits given by roots of algebraic equations determined by cone angles and knot parameters. This construction follows from the geometry of the representation variety and holonomy representations for the specified two-bridge knot families, without any step that defines a quantity in terms of itself or renames a fitted parameter as a prediction. The extension of prior implicit formulas is presented as a direct algebraic simplification rather than a load-bearing self-citation chain; no equation reduces to its own input by construction, and the central claim remains independent of any fitted values or author-overlapping uniqueness theorems. The derivation is self-contained against the algebraic and geometric inputs stated in the manuscript.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The formulas rest on standard properties of Chebyshev polynomials and algebraic geometry of the knot complements; no new free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract description.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Standard recurrence and orthogonality properties of Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind hold and can be used to construct rational integrands for volume expressions.
    Invoked to form the explicit rational functions in the integral formulas.

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