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Transactions of the American Mathematical Society

Published by the American Mathematical Society since 1900, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society is devoted to longer research articles in all areas of pure and applied mathematics.

ISSN 1088-6850 (online) ISSN 0002-9947 (print)

The 2020 MCQ for Transactions of the American Mathematical Society is 1.48.

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Trinity symmetry and kaleidoscopic regular maps
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by Dan Archdeacon, Marston Conder and Jozef Širáň PDF
Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 366 (2014), 4491-4512 Request permission

Abstract:

A cellular embedding of a connected graph (also known as a map) on an orientable surface has trinity symmetry if it is isomorphic to both its dual and its Petrie dual. A map is regular if for any two incident vertex-edge pairs there is an automorphism of the map sending the first pair onto the second. Given a map $M$ with all vertices of the same degree $d$, for any $e$ relatively prime to $d$ the power map $M^e$ is formed from $M$ by replacing the cyclic rotation of edges at each vertex on the surface with the $e$th power of the rotation. A map is kaleidoscopic if all of its power maps are pairwise isomorphic. In this paper, we present a covering construction that gives infinite families of kaleidoscopic regular maps with trinity symmetry.
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Additional Information
  • Dan Archdeacon
  • Affiliation: Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 05405
  • Email: dan.archdeacon@uvm.edu
  • Marston Conder
  • Affiliation: Department of Mathematics, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
  • MR Author ID: 50940
  • ORCID: 0000-0002-0256-6978
  • Email: m.conder@auckland.ac.nz
  • Jozef Širáň
  • Affiliation: Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Open University, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA, United Kingdom – and – Slovak University of Technology, 81368 Bratislava, Slovakia
  • Email: j.siran@open.ac.uk
  • Received by editor(s): September 16, 2012
  • Received by editor(s) in revised form: January 14, 2013
  • Published electronically: December 6, 2013
  • Additional Notes: The first author thanks the Open University which hosted him while much of this research was conducted.
    The second author’s work was supported by the Marsden Fund of New Zealand, project UOA-1015, and assisted by use of the Magma system.
    The third author acknowledges support from the VEGA Research Grant 1/0781/11, the APVV Research Grant 0223-10, and the APVV support as part of the EUROCORES Programme EUROGIGA, project GREGAS, ESF-EC-0009-10, financed by the European Science Foundation.
  • © Copyright 2013 American Mathematical Society
  • Journal: Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 366 (2014), 4491-4512
  • MSC (2010): Primary 05E18, 20B25, 57M15
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-2013-06079-5
  • MathSciNet review: 3206467