Detecting Causality with the Links--Gould Polynomial
Vladimir Chernov, Matthew Harper, Ben-Michael Kohli

TL;DR
The paper investigates the Links--Gould polynomial as a quantum invariant capable of detecting causality in spacetimes by distinguishing links of light rays, potentially surpassing classical invariants like the Alexander--Conway polynomial.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Links--Gould polynomial can distinguish causally related from unrelated light ray links, suggesting it may fully capture causality in spacetime models.
Findings
Links--Gould polynomial distinguishes all Allen-Swenberg links from causally unrelated links.
It detects causality where the Alexander--Conway polynomial fails.
The paper computes the Seifert genus of all Allen-Swenberg links.
Abstract
The conjectures of Low and Natario--Tod, and Penrose's question on Arnold's Problem list ask if causality in spacetimes can be formulated in terms of linking of spheres of light rays in the manifold of all light rays. For -dimensional spacetimes, this link happens in the manifold coverable by a solid torus . This was solved positively by Chernov and Nemirovski, which raises the question of which link invariants can be used to study causality. Chernov, Martin and Petkova proved that Heegaard--Floer and Khovanov homology completely capture causality. Allen--Swenberg conjectured that the Jones polynomial, which is obtained as an alternating Euler characteristic from Khovanov homology, is also sufficient. But they constructed complicated examples of links that suggest that the Alexander--Conway polynomial -- which is the Euler…
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