It is a
theorem that any link always has an associated Seifert surface. This theorem was first published by Frankl and
Pontryagin in 1930. A different proof was published in 1934 by
Herbert Seifert and relies on what is now called the Seifert algorithm. The
algorithm produces a Seifert surface S, given a projection of the knot or link in question. Suppose that link has
m components ( for a knot), the diagram has
d crossing points, and resolving the crossings (preserving the orientation of the knot) yields
f circles. Then the surface S is constructed from
f disjoint disks by attaching
d bands. The
homology group H_1(S) is free abelian on 2
g generators, where :g = \frac{1}{2}(2 - d + f - m) is the
genus of S. The
intersection form Q on H_1(S) is
skew-symmetric, and there is a basis of 2
g cycles a_1, a_2, \ldots, a_{2g} with Q = (Q(a_i, a_j)) equal to a direct sum of the
g copies of the matrix :\begin{pmatrix} 0 & -1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix} The 2
g × 2
g integer
Seifert matrix :V = (v(i, j)) has v(i, j) the
linking number in
Euclidean 3-space (or in the
3-sphere) of
ai and the "pushoff" of
aj in the positive direction of S. More precisely, recalling that Seifert surfaces are bicollared, meaning that we can extend the embedding of S to an embedding of S \times [-1, 1], given some representative loop x which is homology generator in the interior of S, the positive pushout is x \times \{1\} and the negative pushout is x \times \{-1\}. With this, we have :V - V^* = Q, where
V∗ = (
v(
j,
i)) the transpose matrix. Every integer 2
g × 2
g matrix V with V - V^* = Q arises as the Seifert matrix of a knot with genus
g Seifert surface. The
Alexander polynomial is computed from the Seifert matrix by A(t) = \det\left(V - tV^*\right), which is a polynomial of degree at most 2
g in the indeterminate t. The Alexander polynomial is independent of the choice of Seifert surface S, and is an invariant of the knot or link. The
signature of a knot is the
signature of the symmetric Seifert matrix V + V^\mathrm{T}. It is again an invariant of the knot or link. ==Genus of a knot==