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Bridges, Pécs , 2010

Join Carlo H. Séquin as he discusses his search for symmetrical embeddings of regular maps in his math-first talk. Discover the "art" in finding solutions and making them visually appealing.

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Bridges, Pécs , 2010

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  1. Bridges, Pécs, 2010 My Search forSymmetrical Embeddingsof Regular Maps Carlo H. Séquin EECS Computer Science Division University of California, Berkeley

  2. Math  Art This is a “math-first” talk ! “Art” comes into it in secondary ways: • The way I find my solutions is more an “art”than a science or a formal math procedure; • How to make the results visible is also an “art”; • Some of the resulting models can be enhancedso that they become “art-objects” on their own.

  3. Regular Maps of Genus Zero Platonic Solids Hosohedra Di-hedra

  4. The Symmetry of a Regular Map • After an arbitrary edge-to-edge move, every edge can find a matching edge;the whole network coincides with itself.

  5. On Higher-Genus Surfaces:only “Topological” Symmetries Regular map on torus (genus = 1) Edges must be able to stretch and compress NOT a regular map: different-length edge loops 90-degree rotation not possible

  6. How Many Regular Maps on Higher-Genus Surfaces ? Two classical examples: R2.1_{3,8} _12 16 trianglesQuaternion Group [Burnside 1911] R3.1d_{7,3} _824 heptagonsKlein’s Quartic [Klein 1888]

  7. Nomenclature R3.1d_{7,3}_8 Regular map genus = 3 # in that genus-group the dual configuration heptagonal faces valence-3 vertices length of Petrie polygon:  “Eight-fold Way” zig-zag path closes after 8 moves Schläfli symbol

  8. 2006: Marston Conder’s List • http://www.math.auckland.ac.nz/~conder/OrientableRegularMaps101.txt Orientable regular maps of genus 2 to 101: R2.1 : Type {3,8}_12 Order 96 mV = 2 mF = 1 Defining relations for automorphism group: [ T^2, R^-3, (R * S)^2, (R * T)^2, (S * T)^2, (R * S^-3)^2 ] R2.2 : Type {4,6}_12 Order 48 mV = 3 mF = 2 Defining relations for automorphism group: [ T^2, R^4, (R * S)^2, (R * S^-1)^2, (R * T)^2, (S * T)^2, S^6 ] R2.3 : Type {4,8}_8 Order 32 mV = 8 mF = 2 Defining relations for automorphism group: [ T^2, R^4, (R * S)^2, (R * S^-1)^2, (R * T)^2, (S * T)^2, S^-2 * R^2 * S^-2 ] R2.4 : Type {5,10}_2 Order 20 mV = 10 mF = 5 Defining relations for automorphism group: [ T^2, S * R^2 * S, (R, S), (R * T)^2, (S * T)^2, R^-5 ] = “Relators”

  9. Macbeath Surface Entry for the Macbeath surface of genus 7: R7.1 : Type {3,7}_18 Order 1008 mV = 1 mF = 1 Defining relations for automorphism group: [ T^2, R^-3, (R * S)^2, (R * T)^2, (S * T)^2, S^-7, S^-2 * R * S^-3 * R * S^-2 * R^-1 * S^2 * R^-1 * S^2 * R^-1 * S^-2 * R * S^-1 ] • This is the 2nd-simplest surface for which the Hurwitz-limit of 84*(genus-1) can be achieved. • For my 2006 Bridges talk I wanted to make a nice sculptural model of this surface … • I simply could not find a solution !Even though I tried really hard …

  10. R7.1_{3,7}_18Paper Models

  11. Styrofoam Model for R7.1_{3,7}_18

  12. Globally Regular Tiling of Genus 4 But this is not an embedding! Faces intersect heavily! Actual cardboard model(Thanks to David Richter) Conder: R4.2d_{5,4}_6

  13. A Solution for R4.2_{4,5}_6 • Inspiration R3.1: Petrie polygons zig-zag around arms.  R4.2: Let Petrie polygons zig-zag around tunnel walls. A look into a tunnel It works !!!

  14. Nice Color Pattern for R4.2_{4,5}_6 • Use 5 colors • Every color is at every vertex • Every quad is surrounded by the other 4 colors

  15. A Graph-Embedding Problem Find surface of lowest genus in which Dyck’s graph can be drawn crossing-free • Dyck’s graph = K4,4,4 • Tripartite graph • Nodes of the same color are not connected.

  16. An Intuitive Approach • Start with highest-symmetry genus-3 surface: “Tetrus” • Place 12 points so that the missing edges do not break symmetry: •  Inside and outside on each tetra-arm. • Do not connect the nodes that lie on thesame symmetry axis(same color)(or this one).

  17. A Tangible Physical Model • 3D-Print, hand-painted to enhance colors R3.2_{3,8}_6

  18. A Virtual Genus-3 Tiffany Lamp

  19. Light Cast by Genus-3 “Tiffany Lamp” Rendered with “Radiance” Ray-Tracer (12 hours)

  20. “Low-Hanging Fruit” Some early successes . . . R2.2_{4,6}_12 R3.6_{4,8}_8 R4.4_{4,10}_20 and R5.7_{4,12}_12

  21. Genus 5 336 Butterflies Only locallyregular !

  22. Globally Regular Maps on Genus 5

  23. Emergence of a Productive Approach • Depict map domain on the Poincaré disk; establish complete, explicit connectivity graph. • Look for likely symmetries and pick a compatible handle-body. • Place vertex “stars” in symmetrical locations. • Try to complete all edge-interconnections without intersections, creating genus-0 faces. • Clean-up and beautify the model. • { Look how best to turn this into “Art.” }

  24. Depiction on Poincare Disk • Use Schläfli symbol  create Poincaré disk.

  25. R3.4_{4,6}_6 Relator:R s s R s s Relators Identify Repeated Locations Operations: R = 1-”click” ccw-rotation around face center; r = cw-rotation. S = 1-”click” ccw-rotation around a vertex; s = cw-rotation.

  26. Triangles of the same color represent the same face. Introduce unique labels for all edges. Complete Connectivity Information

  27. Low-Genus Handle-Bodies • There is no shortage of nice symmetrical handle-bodies of low genus. • This is a collage I did many years ago for an art exhibit.

  28. Numerology, Intuition, … • Example: R5.10_{6,6}_4 First try:oriented cube symmetry Second try:tetrahedral symmetry

  29. Virtual model Paper model An Valid Solution for R5.10_{6,6}_4 (oriented tetrahedron) (easier to trace a Petrie polygon)

  30. 2 Methods to Find Embeddings • A general “text-book” method for embedding a network in a handle-body of appropriate genus.But this will not yield any nice regular solutions! • The computer-search by Jack J. van Wijk,which found more than 50 good embeddings.But not clear which solutions will emerge; some simple cases could not be found!Some solutions are more twisted than they need be.

  31. The General Text-book Method (1) • Convert the domain of the regular map to a special 4g-gon with the edge sequence:( a, b, a’, b’ )g

  32. The General Text-book Method (2) • Now each sequence of 4 edges: ( a, b, a’, b’ )is first closed into a tube by joining a to a’,then into a closed handle by joining b to b’.

  33. The General Text-book Method (3) • Here is an explicit genus-2 net with this kind of perimeter, and the folded-up 2-loop handle-body that results.

  34. Unfortunately, the result is not nice ! Result for R2.1_{3.8}_12 Vertices do not end upin symmetrical places. The local edge-densityis quite non-uniform. The General Text-book Method (4)

  35. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (1) • Starts from simple regular handle-bodies, e.g. torus, “fleshed-out” hosohedron, or a Platonic solid. • Put regular edge-pattern on each connector arm: • Determine the resulting edge connectivity,and check whether this appears in Conder’s list.If it does, mark it as a success!

  36. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (3) • Cool results: Derived from … Dodecahedron 3×3 square tiles on torus

  37. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (2) • For any such regular edge-configuration found, a wire-frame can be fleshed out, and the resulting handle-body can be subjected to the same treatment. • It is a recursive approach that may yield an unlimited number of results; but you cannot predict which ones you will find and which will be missing. • You cannot (currently) direct that system to give you a solution for a particular map of interest. • The program has some sophisticated geometrical procedures to produce nice graphical output.

  38. J. van Wijk’sMethod (5) • Cool results: Embedding of genus 29

  39. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (5) • Alltogether so far, Jack has found more than 50 symmetrical embeddings. • But some simple maps have eluded this program, e.g. R2.4, R3.3, and: the Macbeath surface R7.1 ! • Also, in some cases, the results don’t look as good as they could . . .

  40. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (6) • Not so cool results: too much warping. My solution on a Tetrus

  41. Jack J. van Wijk’s Method (7) • Not so cool results: too much warping. “Vertex Flower” solution

  42. “Vertex Flowers” for Any Genus • This classical pattern is appropriate for the 2nd-last entry in every genus group. • All of these maps have exactly two vertices and two faces bounded by 2(g+1) edges. g = 1 g = 2 g = 3 g = 4 g = 5

  43. Paper Models for “Vertex Flowers” I first found those embeddings with these paper strip models. g = 2 g = 3

  44. Anatomy of a Paper-Strip Model bendandglue R2.5_{6,6}_2

  45. The Regular Map R3.3_{3,12}_8 • 16 triangles,24 edges, 4 vertices (valence-12).

  46. Deforming & Folding the Map Domain • Fold into a torus with two openings:connect horizontal and vertical edges of same color; • Then bring the 4 green vertices together . . .

  47. Evolution of the Topology Model

  48. Models for R3.3_{3,12}_8 Net and paper model

  49. Models for R3.3_{3,12}_8 Original clean paper model Alternative model in which thefour vertices have been moved to the middle of the handles.

  50. The maps R3.3_{3,12}_8 and R3.5_{4,8}_8 are related. Good Solutions Can Be Re-used ! Pairs of triangles turn into quadrilaterals.

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