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arxiv: 2604.27912 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-30 · 🧮 math.GT · math.DG· math.MG

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Geometric densities and compression radii of knot types

Makoto Ozawa

Authors on Pith no claims yet

Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 06:03 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.GT math.DGmath.MG
keywords knot theoryropelengthgeometric densitycompression radiusscale-covariant functionalsunknotpolygonal approximationknot invariants
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The pith

A factorization of ropelength into D-density and D-compression radius separates the optimization problems for knotted curves.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper develops a general framework for any Euclidean-invariant and scale-covariant size functional D on closed curves in three-space. It defines D-density as length divided by D and D-compression radius as D divided by thickness, so that ropelength is exactly their product. After minimization within a fixed knot type, the density, compression, packing, and ropelength problems generally achieve their infima on distinct sequences of curves. The separation is established by proving an optimized inequality together with an equality criterion, by explicit calculation for the unknot when D is diameter or minimal enclosing radius, and by polygonal approximation theorems that relate smooth and discrete versions for those two choices of D. The framework is presented as a structural tool that organizes these invariants rather than a direct source of stronger ropelength bounds.

Core claim

Given a Euclidean-invariant and scale-covariant size functional D, the D-density of a curve is length over D and the D-compression radius is D over thickness; their product recovers the ropelength. Within each knot type the four problems (density, compression, packing, ropelength) generally possess distinct minimizing sequences. This follows from the basic optimized inequality and its equality case, from explicit evaluation on the unknot, and from convergence results for polygonal approximations when D is diameter or minimal enclosing radius.

What carries the argument

The factorization of ropelength as D-density times D-compression radius, which decouples the four optimization problems after minimization inside a fixed knot type.

If this is right

  • For the unknot the optimal D-density and D-compression radius are attained and can be computed explicitly when D is the diameter or the minimal enclosing radius.
  • Polygonal curves converge to smooth curves in compression radius for D equal to diameter or minimal enclosing radius, using standard convergence of polygonal thickness.
  • The same factorization and inequality apply to general L^p-type size functionals once suitable convergence hypotheses are verified.
  • The factorization relates to other geometric invariants such as distortion, trunk, and supertrunk through the common use of scale-covariant size measures.
  • New lower bounds on ropelength still require independent estimates of the density factor and the compression factor; the factorization by itself supplies none.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Searches for geometrically ideal representatives of a knot type may need to optimize density and compression separately rather than stopping at a single ropelength minimum.
  • The separation suggests that different physical or geometric constraints on knotted objects (packing versus thickness versus total length) are not automatically aligned even at optimality.
  • The framework could be tested numerically by comparing minimizing sequences obtained from independent optimization routines for each factor on the same knot type.
  • Analogous factorizations might be formulated for embeddings in higher dimensions or for other notions of thickness, provided the size functional remains scale-covariant.

Load-bearing premise

That minimizing sequences exist inside each fixed knot type for the D-density, D-compression radius, and ropelength defined from any given Euclidean-invariant and scale-covariant size functional D.

What would settle it

An explicit knot type together with a scale-covariant D for which the same sequence of curves simultaneously minimizes both ropelength and D-density (or both ropelength and D-compression radius).

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.27912 by Makoto Ozawa.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: The representative-level decomposition of rope￾length into a density factor and a compression factor. After optimization over a knot type, the minimizing representa￾tives for the three quantities may differ. around the curve. The existence and structure of ropelength minimizers have been studied in depth; see, for example, [3, 7, 17]. The purpose of the present paper is to separate the ropelength ratio int… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Two basic size functionals. The dashed circle rep￾resents a minimal enclosing ball of radius Rmin(γ) centered at a, while the segment indicates the diameter scale diam(γ). 4. Basic examples and comparisons 4.1. Diameter and minimal enclosing radius. Let D = diam or D = Rmin. Since 1 2 diam(γ) ≤ Rmin(γ) ≤ diam(γ), the corresponding densities and compression radii are equivalent up to uni￾versal constants. M… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Schematic picture of polygonal approximation: a smooth representative γ is approximated by polygonal rep￾resentatives Pn, and the polygonal compression and packing invariants converge to their smooth counterparts. Proof. Writing all integrals with respect to arclength, we compute 1 Len(γ) 2 Z γ Z γ |x − y| 2 dsx dsy = 1 Len(γ) 2 Z γ Z γ view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Left: nearby points with long arclength separa￾tion contribute to distortion. Right: intersections with level planes measure trunk in a chosen direction; taking the worst direction leads to a supertrunk-type quantity. 8.1. Distortion. For an embedded curve γ, its distortion is distort(γ) = sup p,q∈γ dγ(p, q) |p − q| , where dγ(p, q) denotes the shorter arclength distance between p and q along γ. The distor… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We study scale-invariant geometric quantities associated with embedded closed curves in Euclidean three-space, with an emphasis on their behavior under optimization within a fixed knot type. Given a Euclidean-invariant and scale-covariant size functional \(D\), we define the \(D\)-density of a curve \(\gamma\) by \(\len(\gamma)/D(\gamma)\), the \(D\)-compression radius by \(D(\gamma)/\Thi(\gamma)\), and the corresponding packing ratio as its reciprocal. For a single representative, ropelength factors as the product of the \(D\)-density and the \(D\)-compression radius. The main point is not this formal cancellation, but the separation it suggests after optimization: the density, compression, packing, and ropelength problems generally have different minimizing sequences. We develop this factorization framework for general scale-covariant size functionals. We prove the basic optimized inequality, give a criterion for equality after optimization, and compute the unknot case for the diameter and the minimal enclosing radius. We also prove polygonal approximation results for compression radii when \(D=\diam\) and when \(D=R_{\min}\), using standard convergence properties of polygonal thickness, and formulate the corresponding hypotheses for other \(L^p\)-type size functionals. Finally, we discuss relations with distortion, trunk, and supertrunk. The framework is intended as a structural companion to density-type invariants, rather than as an immediate source of stronger ropelength lower bounds. In particular, the optimized factorization by itself does not yield new ropelength bounds; such bounds require independent estimates for the density and compression factors.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript defines D-density as len(γ)/D(γ) and D-compression radius as D(γ)/Thi(γ) for a Euclidean-invariant, scale-covariant size functional D on embedded curves. It observes that ropelength factors as the product of these two quantities for any single curve. The central results are an optimized inequality relating the three infima (of ropelength, density, and compression) over a fixed knot type, together with a criterion for equality after optimization; explicit evaluation of the unknot case for D equal to diameter and to minimal enclosing radius; and polygonal approximation theorems for the compression radii when D is diameter or minimal radius, relying on standard convergence of polygonal thickness. Hypotheses are formulated for other L^p-type functionals, and relations to distortion, trunk, and supertrunk are discussed. The framework is presented as a structural companion that suggests the density, compression, packing, and ropelength problems generally possess distinct minimizing sequences.

Significance. If the central claims hold, the work supplies a clean factorization that separates several related geometric optimization problems within knot types and supplies a criterion for when their infima coincide after optimization. The proofs of the inequality and equality criterion, the explicit unknot computations, and the approximation theorems constitute concrete, parameter-free contributions that can serve as a reference point for future studies of ropelength-type invariants. The general treatment for arbitrary scale-covariant D is a strength. However, the assertion that the problems “generally have different minimizing sequences” rests on the equality criterion failing outside the unknot; without either a non-trivial example or a general argument that simultaneous minimization is exceptional, the separation claim remains suggestive rather than demonstrated. The framework does not claim new ropelength bounds, which is appropriately cautious.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3] §3 (optimized inequality and equality criterion): The equality criterion after optimization is stated in terms of the existence of a single sequence that simultaneously realizes the infima of D-density and D-compression radius. The manuscript supplies no argument showing that this simultaneous realization fails for typical non-trivial knot types, nor any explicit computation for a non-trivial knot that would exhibit strict inequality between the three infima. The only concrete evaluation is the unknot (§4), where the round circle achieves all three infima simultaneously. This gap directly affects the load-bearing claim that the density, compression, packing, and ropelength problems generally possess different minimizing sequences.
  2. [§5] §5 (polygonal approximation theorems): Theorems 5.1 and 5.2 establish convergence of the compression radii for D = diam and D = R_min under polygonal approximations, invoking standard convergence properties of polygonal thickness. These results address existence and limits but do not connect the approximating sequences to the question of whether the infima of density and compression are attained by the same or distinct curves, leaving the separation of the optimization problems without direct support from the approximation framework.
minor comments (2)
  1. [§2] §2 (definitions): The scale-covariance property of D is invoked repeatedly but is not given an explicit one-line verification for a general functional D; adding this would improve readability without altering the argument.
  2. [Discussion] Discussion section: The relations to distortion, trunk, and supertrunk are sketched but lack precise statements of how the new quantities compare numerically or asymptotically with these existing invariants; a short table or remark would clarify the distinctions.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 1 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address the major comments point by point below. Where the comments identify a need for clarification, we have revised the text to tone down suggestive language and to make the status of the equality criterion explicit. We have not added new examples or proofs, as these would require work outside the scope of the present paper.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3] §3 (optimized inequality and equality criterion): The equality criterion after optimization is stated in terms of the existence of a single sequence that simultaneously realizes the infima of D-density and D-compression radius. The manuscript supplies no argument showing that this simultaneous realization fails for typical non-trivial knot types, nor any explicit computation for a non-trivial knot that would exhibit strict inequality between the three infima. The only concrete evaluation is the unknot (§4), where the round circle achieves all three infima simultaneously. This gap directly affects the load-bearing claim that the density, compression, packing, and ropelength problems generally possess different minimizing sequences.

    Authors: We agree that the manuscript provides neither a general argument nor an explicit non-trivial example demonstrating that simultaneous realization of the two infima fails outside the unknot. The equality criterion is a sufficient condition under which the optimized inequality becomes an equality; the unknot computation in §4 shows that this sufficient condition can be satisfied. The statement that the problems “generally” possess distinct minimizing sequences is therefore based on the factorization together with the expectation that the equality case is exceptional, but remains conjectural. In the revised manuscript we have changed the abstract and the closing paragraph of §3 to read that the framework “suggests” distinct minimizing sequences and that whether the equality criterion holds for non-trivial knots is an open question left for future work. No new example or proof has been added. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§5] §5 (polygonal approximation theorems): Theorems 5.1 and 5.2 establish convergence of the compression radii for D = diam and D = R_min under polygonal approximations, invoking standard convergence properties of polygonal thickness. These results address existence and limits but do not connect the approximating sequences to the question of whether the infima of density and compression are attained by the same or distinct curves, leaving the separation of the optimization problems without direct support from the approximation framework.

    Authors: The polygonal approximation theorems establish that the D-compression radii (for D equal to diameter and to minimal enclosing radius) are limits of sequences of polygonal curves, using the standard convergence of polygonal thickness. Their purpose is to guarantee that the infima of the compression factor are approachable by finite polygons, which may be useful for numerical work. We agree that these results do not address whether the minimizing sequences for D-density and D-compression radius coincide. The separation of the optimization problems is indicated by the factorization and the equality criterion of §3 rather than by the approximation theorems. No revision to §5 is required. revision: no

standing simulated objections not resolved
  • Constructing or exhibiting an explicit non-trivial knot type for which the infima of D-density and D-compression radius are realized by distinct sequences (i.e., for which the equality criterion fails) would require either a new theoretical argument or substantial numerical optimization and lies outside the results of the current manuscript.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: definitions and inequalities are direct from standard infima and pointwise factorization

full rationale

The paper defines D-density as len(γ)/D(γ) and D-compression radius as D(γ)/Thi(γ) for any Euclidean-invariant scale-covariant D. It notes the pointwise algebraic identity ropelength(γ) = density(γ) × compression(γ), then states the standard inequality inf(ropelength) ≥ inf(density) × inf(compression) over a fixed knot type together with a criterion for equality (existence of a sequence simultaneously attaining both infima). These relations follow immediately from the definitions and the general property that inf(fg) ≥ inf(f)·inf(g) when f,g > 0; no fitted parameters, self-referential equations, or load-bearing self-citations appear. Explicit evaluation is performed only for the unknot (where equality holds for the round circle), but this is an application rather than a reduction of the framework itself. Polygonal approximation results invoke standard convergence of polygonal thickness and do not close any loop. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained and non-circular.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper relies on standard properties of length, thickness, and scale-covariant functionals from existing knot theory; no free parameters or new invented entities are introduced.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The size functional D is Euclidean-invariant and scale-covariant
    Explicitly required in the definition of D-density and D-compression radius.
  • domain assumption Minimizing sequences exist within each fixed knot type for the quantities considered
    Implicit in the discussion of optimization and the statement that the problems generally have different minimizing sequences.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5590 in / 1417 out tokens · 82469 ms · 2026-05-07T06:03:08.188106+00:00 · methodology

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Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Swept-Area Pseudometrics on Ropelength-Filtered Knot Spaces

    math.GT 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Defines swept-area pseudometrics on ropelength-filtered knot spaces, proves non-degeneracy on polygonal strata, exact distances for concentric unknots and ellipses, and rigidity of the ideal unknot.

Reference graph

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17 extracted references · 2 canonical work pages · cited by 1 Pith paper

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