Artin's presentation of braid group on three strands is: $$ B_3 = \langle l,r : lrl = rlr \rangle $$ where you should think of "$l$" as the positive crossing between the left and middle strands and "$r$" as the positive crossing of the right and middle strands:
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l = \ | r = | \
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Then there is a surjection $B_3 \to S_3$ given by $l \mapsto (12)$ and $r \mapsto (23)$. ($S_3$ is the symmetric group on three letters: it is generated by $(12)^2 = 1 = (23)^2$ and the braid relation above.) The pure braid group $PB_3$ is the kernel of this surjection.
The six-crossing braid $b = lr^{-1}lr^{-1}lr^{-1}$ is an element of the pure braid group. Let $N$ be the minimal normal subgroup of $B_3$ that contains $b$. Certainly $N \subseteq PB_3$.
Question: Do we have $N = PB_3$?
Motivation
The motivation for my question comes from a neat trick that Conway showed us years ago. It leads to a more nuanced question than what I asked that I will pose as its own question if the answer above is "no". My memory is that at the time Conway did not know the answer to the more nuanced question, which suggests that the answer above cannot be "yes".
Take a long and reasonably thin rectangle of paper, and score it with two cuts, so that you have three strips of paper that are connected at both ends, so that you end up with a (framed, oriented, ...) "theta graph":
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Then with some finagling, you can in fact "tie" the six-crossing braid in those three strands, without ripping the paper further, by passing the bottom through itself a few times. (The trick is that it's easier to unbraid than to braid, so make your paper long enough that you can put $bb^{-1}$ into it, and then unbraid the $b^{-1}$.) Put another way: you can first put a hair-tie at the end of your ponytail, and then braid your hair.
The harder question is to characterize all braids that you can put on the above "theta graph". The following facts are essentially obvious:
- Any "braiding" of the theta graph is pure.
- The set of braidings of the theta graph is a subgroup of $B_3$.
- The set of braidings of the theta graph is closed under conjugating by arbitrary braids.
Therefore, the set $T$ of braidings of the theta graph is a normal subgroup of $B_3$, with $N \subseteq T \subseteq PB_3$. In particular, a positive answer to the question above characterizes $T$.