Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Authors' Addresses
- Introduction
- Part 1 Sporadic groups
- Part 2 Moonshine
- Part 3 Local and geometric methods in group theory
- Part 4 Geometries and related groups
- Part 5 Finite and algebraic groups of Lie type
- Part 6 Finite permutation groups
- Part 7 Further aspects of simple groups
- Part 8 Related topics
- 36 The orbifold notation for surface groups
- 37 A remark on two Diophantine equations of Peter Cameron
- 38 Testing for isomorphism between finitely presented groups
- 39 Discrete groups and, Galois theory
40 - Smooth coverings of regular maps
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Authors' Addresses
- Introduction
- Part 1 Sporadic groups
- Part 2 Moonshine
- Part 3 Local and geometric methods in group theory
- Part 4 Geometries and related groups
- Part 5 Finite and algebraic groups of Lie type
- Part 6 Finite permutation groups
- Part 7 Further aspects of simple groups
- Part 8 Related topics
- 36 The orbifold notation for surface groups
- 37 A remark on two Diophantine equations of Peter Cameron
- 38 Testing for isomorphism between finitely presented groups
- 39 Discrete groups and, Galois theory
Summary
Abstract
This paper describes a method, algorithmic in part, for determining thoseregular maps N which are smooth covers of a given regular map M. In the case where the base map M is reflexible, the method is able to distinguish between the chiral and the reflexible covers. The method is illustrated with an important example, M=k2(O), a 9-fold covering of which is one of the two smallest chiral maps with triangular faces.
Preliminaries
The paper contains a fuller account of the following definitions and preliminary results: a map M is an embedding of a (very general) graph into a surface. We consider the map to be barycentrically subdivided into triangular regions called flags, and choose one flag to be special; this is the root flag, I. Each flag f has three neighbors, denoted fr0, fr1, fr2 as in Figure 1:
Then r0, r1, r2 are permutations on Ω, the collection of flags. These three involutions generate a group C, the connection group. A symmetry of M is a permutation of ω which commutes with C, and G(M) is the group of all symmetries. We want to discuss two kinds of regularity: (1) M is rotary if G(M) has symmetries R and S which send the root flag I to Ir1r0 and Ir1r2, respectively. G+(M) is the subgroup of G(M) generated by R and S. This is a (2,p, q) group, where p and q are the orders of R and S respectively. (2) If M is rotary, then it is reflexible provided that G(M)also contains a symmetry X which sends I to Ir1, and otherwise it is chiral.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Groups, Combinatorics and Geometry , pp. 480 - 489Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992
- 1
- Cited by