Realizing finite edge-transitive orientable maps
✍ Scribed by Jozef Širáň; Thomas W. Tucker; Mark E. Watkins
- Book ID
- 102340600
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 382 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-9024
- DOI
- 10.1002/jgt.1000
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
J.E. Graver and M.E. Watkins, Memoirs Am. Math. Soc. 126 (601) (1997) established that the automorphism group of an edge‐transitive, locally finite map manifests one of exactly 14 algebraically consistent combinations (called types) of the kinds of stabilizers of its edges, its vertices, its faces, and its Petrie walks. Exactly eight of these types are realized by infinite, locally finite maps in the plane. H.S.M. Coxeter (Regular Polytopes, 2nd ed., McMillan, New York, 1963) had previously observed that the nine finite edge‐transitive planar maps realize three of the eight planar types.
In the present work, we show that for each of the 14 types and each integer n ≥ 11 such that n ≡ 3,11 (mod 12), there exist finite, orientable, edge‐transitive maps whose various stabilizers conform to the given type and whose automorphism groups are (abstractly) isomorphic to the symmetric group Sym(n). Exactly seven of these types (not a subset of the planar eight) are shown to admit infinite families of finite, edge‐transitive maps on the torus, and their automorphism groups are determined explicitly. Thus all finite, edge‐transitive toroidal maps are classified according to this schema. Finally, it is shown that exactly one of the 14 types can be realized as an abelian group of an edge‐transitive map, namely, as ℤ~n~ × ℤ~2~ where n ≡ 2 (mod 4). © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Graph Theory 37: 1–34, 2001
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
We investigate generalized phase transitions of type localization-delocalization from one to several Sinai-Bowen-Ruelle invariant measures in finite networks of chaotic elements (coupled map lattices) with general graphs of connections in the limit of weak coupling.
## Abstract We have used a combinatorial gradient technique to map precisely how the terrace structure and microdomain lattice alignment in a thin film of a sphere‐forming diblock copolymer are affected by both the thickness of the copolymer film and the height of a series of parallel step edges fa