The genus g, of a map M is given by Euler's relation which is equal to if the map is orientable, and if the map is non-orientable. It is a crucial fact that there is a finite (non-zero) number of regular maps for every orientable genus except the torus.
Group-theoretical approach
Group-theoretically, the permutation representation of a regular map M is a transitive permutation groupC, on a set of flags, generated by three fixed-point free involutions r0, r1, r2 satisfying (r0r2)2= I. In this definition the faces are the orbits of F = <r0, r1>, edges are the orbits of E = <r0, r2>, and vertices are the orbits of V = <r1, r2>. More abstractly, the automorphism group of any regular map is the non-degenerate, homomorphic image of a <2,m,n>-triangle group.
Graph-theoretical approach
Graph-theoretically, a map is a cubic graph with edges coloured blue, yellow, red such that: is connected, every vertex is incident to one edge of each colour, and cycles of edges not coloured yellow have length 4. Note that is the flag graph or graph-encoded map (GEM) of the map, defined on the vertex set of flags and is not the skeleton G = (V,E) of the map. In general, || = 4|E|.
A map M is regular if Aut(M) actsregularly on the flags. Aut(M) of a regular map is transitive on the vertices, edges, and faces of M. A map M is said to be reflexible iff Aut(M) is regular and contains an automorphism that fixes both a vertex v and a face f, but reverses the order of the edges. A map which is regular but not reflexible is said to be chiral.
Examples
The great dodecahedron is a regular map with pentagonal faces in the orientable surface of genus 4.
The Dyck map is a regular map of 12 octagons on a genus-3 surface. Its underlying graph, the Dyck graph, can also form a regular map of 16 hexagons in a torus.
The following is a complete list of regular maps in surfaces of positive Euler characteristic, χ: the sphere and the projective plane.[2]
The images below show three of the 20 regular maps in the triple torus, labelled with their Schläfli types.
{6,4}
{4,8}
{8,4}
Toroidal polyhedra
Example visualized as nets
{4,4}1,0 (v:1, e:2, f:1)
{4,4}1,1 (v:2, e:4, f:2)
{4,4}2,0 (v:4, e:8, f:4)
{4,4}2,1 (v:5, e:10, f:5)
{4,4}2,2 (v:8, e:16, f:8)
{3,6}1,0 (v:1, e:3, f:2)
{3,6}1,1 (v:3, e:9, f:6)
{3,6}2,0 (v:4, e:12, f:8)
{3,6}2,1 (v:7, e:21, f:14)
{3,6}2,2 (v:12, e:36, f:24)
{6,3}1,0 (v:2, e:3, f:1)
{6,3}1,1 (v:6, e:9, f:3)
{6,3}2,0 (v:8, e:12, f:4)
{6,3}2,1 (v:14, e:21, f:7)
{6,3}2,2 (v:24, e:36, f:12)
Regular maps exist as torohedral polyhedra as finite portions of Euclidean tilings, wrapped onto the surface of a duocylinder as a flat torus. These are labeled {4,4}b,c for those related to the square tiling, {4,4}.[4] {3,6}b,c are related to the triangular tiling, {3,6}, and {6,3}b,c related to the hexagonal tiling, {6,3}. b and c are whole numbers.[5] There are 2 special cases (b,0) and (b,b) with reflective symmetry, while the general cases exist in chiral pairs (b,c) and (c,b).
Regular maps of the form {4,4}m,0 can be represented as the finite regular skew polyhedron {4,4 | m}, seen as the square faces of a m×mduoprism in 4-dimensions.
Here's an example {4,4}8,0 mapped from a plane as a chessboard to a cylinder section to a torus. The projection from a cylinder to a torus distorts the geometry in 3 dimensions, but can be done without distortion in 4-dimensions.
Flat toroidal polyhedra Same as rectified {4,4 | b}
0
1
{4,4}b,c n=b2+c2
n
2n
n
[4,4]+ (b,c)
4n
Flat chiral toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{3,6}b,0 t=b2
t
3t
2t
[3,6](b,0)
12t
Flat toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{3,6}b,b t=3b2
t
3t
2t
[3,6](b,b)
12t
Flat toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{3,6}b,c t=b2+bc+c2
t
3t
2t
[3,6]+ (b,c)
6t
Flat chiral toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{6,3}b,0 t=b2
2t
3t
t
[3,6](b,0)
12t
Flat toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{6,3}b,b t=3b2
2t
3t
t
[3,6](b,b)
12t
Flat toroidal polyhedra
0
1
{6,3}b,c t=b2+bc+c2
2t
3t
t
[3,6]+ (b,c)
6t
Flat chiral toroidal polyhedra
In generally regular toroidal polyhedra {p,q}b,c can be defined if either p or q are even, although only euclidean ones above can exist as toroidal polyhedra in 4-dimensions. In {2p,q}, the paths (b,c) can be defined as stepping face-edge-face in straight lines, while the dual {p,2q} forms will see the paths (b,c) as stepping vertex-edge-vertex in straight lines.
Hyperbolic regular maps
The map {6,4}3 can be seen as {6,4}4,0. Following opposite edges will traverse all 4 hexagons in sequence. It exists in the petrial octahedron, {3,4}π with 6 vertices, 12 edges and 4 skew hexagon faces.
^Coxeter 1980, 8.4 Maps of type {3,6} or {6,3} on a torus.
^Coxeter and Moser, Generators and Relations for Discrete Groups, 1957, Chapter 8, Regular maps, 8.3 Maps of type {4,4} on a torus, 8.4 Maps of type {3,6} or {6,3} on a torus
Coxeter, H. S. M.; Moser, W. O. J. (1980), Generators and Relations for Discrete Groups, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete, vol. 14 (4th ed.), Springer Verlag, ISBN978-0-387-09212-6.