Hosting and Friendship of Knots on Minimal Genus Seifert Surfaces

Abstract

For a knot K⊂ S3, let S(K) denote the set of knot types represented by simple closed curves on a minimal genus Seifert surface of K. We study the directed relation K J defined by J∈ S(K), which we call the hosting relation, and call its symmetric part friendship. This gives a new framework for describing how knots appear on minimal genus Seifert surfaces of other knots. A classical result of Lyon implies that the family of torus knots is a universal host family: every non-trivial knot is hosted by some torus knot. In contrast, a central result of this paper is that no knot is a universal host: for every knot K, there exists a knot J such that \[ J S(K). \] Thus universal hosting occurs at the level of families, but never at the level of a single knot. We also study explicit examples of hosting and friendship. In particular, we describe the hosting set of the trefoil in terms of primitive slope classes on its once-punctured torus fiber, and use this description to obtain concrete friendship and non-friendship phenomena. For example, we show that 31 and 819 are friends, whereas 31 and 41 are not. These results provide a framework for studying universal host phenomena, hosting, and friendship among knots on minimal genus Seifert surfaces, and suggest further connections with graph-theoretic, rigidity, and categorical aspects of knot theory.

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