Winding Number
Winding Number
Winding numbers are fundamental objects of study in algebraic topology, and they play
an important role in vector calculus, complex analysis, geometric topology, differential
geometry, and physics, including string theory.
Contents
• 1 Intuitive description
• 2 Formal definition
• 3 Alternative definitions
o 3.3 Topology
o 3.4 Polygons
• 4 Turning number
equations
• 6 See also
• 7 External links
[edit]Intuitive description
An object traveling along the red curve makes two counterclockwise turns around the person at the origin.
Suppose we are given a closed, oriented curve in the xy plane. We can imagine the
curve as the path of motion of some object, with the orientation indicating the direction
in which the object moves. Then the winding number of the curve is equal to the total
number of counterclockwise turns that the object makes around the origin.
When counting the total number of turns, counterclockwise motion counts as positive,
while clockwise motion counts as negative. For example, if the object first circles the
origin four times counterclockwise, and then circles the origin once clockwise, then the
total winding number of the curve is three.
Using this scheme, a curve that does not travel around the origin at all has winding
number zero, while a curve that travels clockwise around the origin has negative
winding number. Therefore, the winding number of a curve may be any integer. The
following pictures show curves with winding numbers between −2 and 3:
−2 −1 0
1 2 3
[edit]Formal definition
A curve in the xy plane can be defined by parametric equations:
If we think of the parameter t as time, then these equations specify the motion of
an object in the plane between t = 0 and t = 1. The path of this motion is a curve
as long as thefunctions x(t) and y(t) are continuous. This curve is closed as long
as the position of the object is the same at t = 0 and t = 1.
We can define the winding number of such a curve using the polar coordinate
system. Assuming the curve does not pass through the origin, we can rewrite the
parametric equations in polar form:
The functions r(t) and θ(t) are required to be continuous, with r > 0. Because
the initial and final positions are the same, θ(0) and θ(1) must differ by an
integer multiple of 2π. This integer is the winding number: