Prime knot

In knot theory, a prime knot or prime link is a knot that is, in a certain sense, indecomposable. Specifically, it is a non-trivial knot which cannot be written as the knot sum of two non-trivial knots. Knots that are not prime are said to be composite knots or composite links. It can be a nontrivial problem to determine whether a given knot is prime or not.

A family of examples of prime knots are the torus knots. These are formed by wrapping a circle around a torus p times in one direction and q times in the other, where p and q are coprime integers.

Knots are characterized by their crossing numbers. The simplest prime knot is the trefoil with three crossings. The trefoil is actually a (2, 3)-torus knot. The figure-eight knot, with four crossings, is the simplest non-torus knot. For any positive integer n, there are a finite number of prime knots with n crossings. The first few values for exclusively prime knots (sequence A002863 in the OEIS) and for prime or composite knots (sequence A086825 in the OEIS) are given in the following table. As of June 2025, prime knots up to 20 crossings have been fully tabulated.

n 1234567891011121314151617181920
Number of prime knots
with n crossings
00112372149165552217699884697225329313887058053393482664662941304581847319428
Composite knots 00000215..................
Total 001125826..................

Enantiomorphs are counted only once in this table and the following chart (i.e. a knot and its mirror image are considered equivalent).