A geometric foundation of virtual knot theory
Micah Chrisman

TL;DR
This paper develops a geometric sheaf-theoretic model for virtual knots, interpreting them as points in a topos that formalizes the intuitive notion of knots in variable ambient spaces, unifying diagrammatic and geometric perspectives.
Contribution
It introduces a sheaf-theoretic framework that models virtual knots as points in a Grothendieck topos, providing a geometric foundation that generalizes classical knot theory.
Findings
Sheaf-theoretic model for virtual knots established
Virtual knots correspond to points in a Grothendieck topos
Classical knots embed into the virtual knot framework
Abstract
Virtual knots are defined diagrammatically as a collection of figures, called virtual knot diagrams, that are considered equivalent up to finite sequences of extended Reidemeister moves. By contrast, knots in can be defined geometrically. They are the points of a space of knots. The knot space has a topology so that equivalent knots lie in the same path component. The aim of this paper is to use sheaf theory to obtain a fully geometric model for virtual knots. The geometric model formalizes the intuitive notion that a virtual knot is an actual knot residing in a variable ambient space; the usual diagrammatic theory follows as in the classical case. To do this, it is shown that there exists a site so that its category of sheaves can be naturally interpreted as the ``space of virtual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeometric and Algebraic Topology · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology · Topological and Geometric Data Analysis
