Rotation system
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combinatorial Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many ap ...
mathematics, rotation systems (also called combinatorial embeddings or
combinatorial maps A combinatorial map is a combinatorial representation of a graph on an orientable surface. A combinatorial map may also be called a combinatorial embedding, a rotation system, an orientable ribbon graph, a fat graph, or a cyclic graph. More gener ...
) encode embeddings of graphs onto
orientable In mathematics, orientability is a property of some topological spaces such as real vector spaces, Euclidean spaces, surfaces, and more generally manifolds that allows a consistent definition of "clockwise" and "counterclockwise". A space i ...
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by describing the circular ordering of a
graph Graph may refer to: Mathematics *Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges **Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties *Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discre ...
's edges around each vertex. A more formal definition of a rotation system involves pairs of permutations; such a pair is sufficient to determine a
multigraph In mathematics, and more specifically in graph theory, a multigraph is a graph which is permitted to have multiple edges (also called ''parallel edges''), that is, edges that have the same end nodes. Thus two vertices may be connected by more ...
, a surface, and a 2-cell embedding of the multigraph onto the surface. Every rotation scheme defines a unique 2-cell embedding of a
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multigraph on a closed oriented surface (up to orientation-preserving topological equivalence). Conversely, any embedding of a connected multigraph ''G'' on an oriented closed surface defines a unique rotation system having ''G'' as its underlying multigraph. This fundamental equivalence between rotation systems and 2-cell-embeddings was first settled in a dual form by Lothar Heffter in the 1890s and extensively used by Ringel during the 1950s. Independently,
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gave the primal form of the theorem and the details of his study have been popularized by Youngs. The generalization to multigraphs was presented by Gross and Alpert. Rotation systems are related to, but not the same as, the '' rotation maps'' used by Reingold et al. (2002) to define the
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of graphs. A rotation system specifies a circular ordering of the edges around each vertex, while a rotation map specifies a (non-circular) permutation of the edges at each vertex. In addition, rotation systems can be defined for any graph, while as Reingold et al. define them rotation maps are restricted to
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s.


Formal definition

Formally, a rotation system is defined as a pair (σ, θ) where σ and θ are permutations acting on the same ground set ''B'', θ is a fixed-point-free
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, and the
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<σ, θ> generated by σ and θ
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transitively on ''B''. To derive a rotation system from a 2-cell embedding of a connected multigraph ''G'' on an oriented surface, let ''B'' consist of the ''darts'' (or ''flags'', or ''half-edges'') of ''G''; that is, for each edge of ''G'' we form two elements of ''B'', one for each endpoint of the edge. Even when an edge has the same vertex as both of its endpoints, we create two darts for that edge. We let θ(''b'') be the other dart formed from the same edge as ''b''; this is clearly an involution with no fixed points. We let σ(''b'') be the dart in the clockwise position from ''b'' in the cyclic order of edges incident to the same vertex, where "clockwise" is defined by the orientation of the surface. If a multigraph is embedded on an orientable but not oriented surface, it generally corresponds to two rotation systems, one for each of the two orientations of the surface. These two rotation systems have the same involution θ, but the permutation σ for one rotation system is the inverse of the corresponding permutation for the other rotation system.


Recovering the embedding from the rotation system

To recover a multigraph from a rotation system, we form a vertex for each orbit of σ, and an edge for each orbit of θ. A vertex is incident with an edge if these two orbits have a
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intersection. Thus, the number of incidences per vertex is the size of the orbit, and the number of incidences per edge is exactly two. If a rotation system is derived from a 2-cell embedding of a connected multigraph ''G'', the graph derived from the rotation system is isomorphic to ''G''. To embed the graph derived from a rotation system onto a surface, form a disk for each orbit of σθ, and glue two disks together along an edge ''e'' whenever the two darts corresponding to ''e'' belong to the two orbits corresponding to these disks. The result is a 2-cell embedding of the derived multigraph, the two-cells of which are the disks corresponding to the orbits of σθ. The surface of this embedding can be oriented in such a way that the clockwise ordering of the edges around each vertex is the same as the clockwise ordering given by σ.


Characterizing the surface of the embedding

According to the Euler formula we can deduce the
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''g'' of the closed orientable surface defined by the rotation system (\sigma,\theta) (that is, the surface on which the underlying multigraph is 2-cell embedded)., formula 1.3, p. 38. Notice that V=, Z(\sigma), , E=, Z(\theta), and F=, Z(\sigma\theta), . We find that :g=1-\frac(V-E+F)=1-\frac(, Z(\sigma), -, Z(\theta), +, Z(\sigma\theta), ) where Z(\phi) denotes the set of the orbits of permutation \phi.


See also

* Combinatorial map


Notes


References

* * * * * * * . * * * *{{cite journal , first = J. W. T. , last=Youngs , title = Minimal imbeddings and the genus of a graph , journal =
Journal of Mathematics and Mechanics The ''Indiana University Mathematics Journal'' is a journal of mathematics published by Indiana University. Its first volume was published in 1952, under the name ''Journal of Rational Mechanics and Analysis'' and edited by Zachery D. Paden and ...
, volume = 12 , issue = 2 , year = 1963 , pages = 303–315 , mr=0145512 , doi = 10.1512/iumj.1963.12.12021 , doi-access = free Topological graph theory