nLab tangle

Redirected from "category of framed oriented tangles".
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Idea

An ordinary tangle is a 1-dimensional manifold with boundary that is embedded into the 3-cube, such that the boundary is embedded into chosen chosen pair opposing sides of the cube.

Thus, one may think of a tangle as (a knot if it is connected or generally as) a link that was cut at several points and the resulting strands pulled apart at their endpoints to opposite sides of the cube. Conversely, a link (knot) is equivalently a (connected) tangle with empty boundary.

Similarly, a tangle that progresses monotonically from its source to its target is equivalently a braid.

The notion of tangles generalizes to that of mm-tangles in dimension nn, which are mm-manifolds with corners embedded into the nn-cube such that their corners are appropriately embedded in the cube’s boundary. In this sense ordinary tangles are the 1-tangles in 3-space.

Properties

Category of tangles

Tangles naturally constitute the morphisms of a category:

The objects are finite subsets of R 2\mathbf{R}^2. Morphisms ABA\to B are embeddings of unions of finitely many closed intervals and circles into [0,1]×R 2[0,1]\times\mathbf{R}^2 such that the restriction of the embedding to the endpoints yields a bijection to ABA\sqcup B. Morphisms are composed by gluing two copies of [0,1][0,1] together and rescaling.

As usual, this suffers from being associative only up to an ambient isotopy. Thus, one can either take ambient isotopy classes of such embeddings, obtaining a 1-category of tangles, or instead turn tangles into an (∞,1)-category, in which case morphisms ABA\to B will encode the whole homotopy type of the space of embeddings described above.

Category of framed tangles

Analogously there is a notion of framed tangles which are to ordinary tangles as framed links are to ordinary links.

(Shum 1994, Yetter 2001 Thm. 9.1)

Higher-dimensional variants

Higher-dimensional tangles, i.e. mm-manifolds with corners embedded in the nn-cube, were considered for instance in Baez and Dolan 95. A “tame” definition of tangles that admit finite stratifications by their critical point types was given in Dorn and Douglas 22.

References

See also:

Exposition

Last revised on August 31, 2024 at 18:20:39. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.