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                  July 
                    - December 2011  
                    Thematic Program on Discrete Geometry and Applications  
                    
                  October Workshops  
                    Proposed talk titles and abstract submissions. Accepted talks 
                    will be 20 to 30 minutes in length.
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            OCTOBER WORKSHOPS 
               
            
            October 11-14, 2011  
              Workshop on Rigidity 
               
            Alfakih, Abdo Y. 
              On the Universal rigidity of bar frameworks in general position 
               
             
              A bar framework G(p) in r-dimensional Euclidean 
                space is a graph G whose vertices are points p1, p2,.., pn in 
                R^r, and whose edges are line segments connecting pairs of these 
                points. A given framework G(p) in R^r is said to be universally 
                rigid if there does not exist a non-congruent framework G(q) in 
                any Euclidean space with the same edge lengths as those of G(p). 
                A framework G(p) in R^r is generic if the coordinates of p1,...,pn 
                are algebraicaly independent over the integers. On the other hand, 
                G(p) is in general position in R^r if there is no subset, of cardinality 
                r+1, of the points p1, ...,pn that is affinely dependent. It is 
                known that a generic framework G(p) on n vertices in R^r is universally 
                rigid if and only if G(p) admits a positive semi-definite stress 
                matrix of rank n-r-1. In this talk, Ill show that the "if" 
                part of this result still holds under the weaker assumption of 
                a framework in general position. Universal rigidity has many important 
                applications in molecular conformation and wireless sensor networks. 
                (This is a joint work with Yinyu Ye). 
             
            Bezdek, Karoly 
              Rigid ball-polyhedra in Euclidean 3-space 
             
              A ball-polyhedron is the intersection with 
                non-empty interior of finitely many (closed) unit balls in Euclidean 
                3-space. One can represent the boundary of a ball-polyhedron as 
                the union of vertices, edges, and faces defined in a rather natural 
                way. A ball-polyhedron is called a simple ball-polyhedron if at 
                every vertex exactly three edges meet. Moreover, a ball-polyhedron 
                is called a standard ball-polyhedron if its vertex-edge-face structure 
                is a lattice (with respect to containment). To each edge of a 
                ball-polyhedron one can assign an inner dihedral angle and say 
                that the given ball-polyhedron is rigid with respect to its inner 
                dihedral angles if the vertex-edge-face structure of the ball-polyhedron 
                and its inner dihedral angles determine the ball-polyhedron up 
                to congruence locally. The main result of this talk is a Cauchy-type 
                rigidity theorem for ball-polyhedra stating that a simple ball-polyhedron 
                is rigid with respect to its inner dihedral angles if and only 
                if it is a standard ball-polyhedron. This is a joint work with 
                M. Naszodi (Eotvos Univ., Budapest). 
             
            Cheng, Jialong and Sitharam, Meera  
              Better Estimates of 3D rigidity 
             
              Maxwell's condition states that the edges 
                of a graph are independent in its d-dimensional generic rigidity 
                matroid only if (a) the number of edges does not exceed d|V| - 
                {d+1 choose 2}, and (b)this holds for every induced subgraph. 
                Such graphs are called Sparse orMaxwell-independent in d-dimensions.Laman's 
                theorem shows that the converse holds in 2D. While the converse 
                is false in 3D, we answer the following questions in the affirmative. 
                The first question was posed by Tib'or Jord'an at the 2008 rigidity 
                workshop at BIRS. 
                We consider the following questions. 
                Question 1:Does every maximal, Maxwell-independent set of a graph 
                have size at least the rank? 
                Question 2: Is there a better and tractable combinatorial upper 
                bound (than the number 
                of edges) for Sparse or Maxwell-independent graphs?We give affirmative 
                answers to both questions. As one consequence, the answers also 
                give simpler proofs of correctness for existing algorithms 
                that give rank bounds. 
             
             
              Connelly, Bob Cornell University 
              Rigidity, tensegrities, and some applications 
             
              The theory of rigid structures has been 
                developed greatly over the last fifty years or so. This will be 
                a discussion of some of the main results and the main concepts. 
                One important thing is what is the definition of rigidity? Local 
                rigidity, global rigidity, infinitesimal rigidity, static rigidity, 
                and uniform rigidity all are good examples of definitions that 
                are possible. I will discuss what these mean and show some of 
                the connections and applications. Another important thing is what 
                are the objects that are rigid. There are bar-and-joint frameworks, 
                tensegrities, packings, bar-and-body frameworks, and body-hindge, 
                for example. This is a background and preview of many of the talks 
                to come. 
             
            Crapo, Henry 
              Isostatic Graphs and Semi-simplicial 
              Maps  
               
             
              Following work initiated by Tiong Seng 
                Tay, we know that a graph $G$ is generically isostatic in dimension 
                $D$ if it has a shellable semi-simplicial map $f$ to the $D$-simplex 
                $K_{d+1}$. The converse is known only for $D=1,2$. We of course 
                concentrate on the case $D=3$. In a semi-simplicial map to $K_4$, 
                incidence must be preserved: edges whose end vertices go to the 
                same vertex, say $j$, we call a {\it loop at $j$}, which must 
                be sent to an edge of $K_4$ incident to $j$. We also insist that 
                the inverse image $f^{-1}(ij)$ of any edge $ij$ of $K_4$ be a 
                {\it tree} connecting the vertex set $f^{-1}(i)\cup f^{-1}(j)$. 
                A map is {\it shellable} if and only if, starting from the degenerate 
                placement of the graph as its image under $f$, {\it in} the tetrahedron, 
                the vertices can be gradually separated without making discontinuous 
                change in edge directions. A simple proof shows that the existence 
                of a shellable semi-simplicial map $F:G\to K_4$ implies $G$ is 
                $3$-isostatic. It is not known whether every $3$-isostatic graph 
                has such a shellable map. But "normally" there are so 
                many you would not want to bother to count them. 
                Computer programs, which I write in Python, can establish that 
                a given graph is isostatic, and quickly so, simply because so 
                many shellable maps exist. But such programs are virtually useless 
                in showing that a 3v-6 graph is dependent, since we must wait 
                until the dreary end of the computation, only to find that there 
                are no shellable maps, \dots and even then not to be sure of dependency, 
                since there is no such theorem proven. 
                The situation is very similar to that encountered when using Henneberg 
                reduction (and for good reason). 
                In this talk we describe recent work to cut down the search for 
                maps, and to eliminate the need to produce shellings, by concentrating 
                on maps in which non-shellable vertex packets (inverse images 
                of a single vertex) can not occur: those in which vertex packets 
                induce subgraphs having no cycles. Such maps are {\it "freely 
                shellable"}. Roger Poh has proven that for any planar graph 
                there is a partition of its vertices into no more than three parts, 
                each part inducing a path as subgraph. Such partitions are not 
                necessarily vertex partitions under inverse image of a semi-simplicial 
                map. But since maximal planar graphs are generically $3$-isostatic, 
                we are still led to conjecture that isostatic graphs share similar 
                properties. We conjecture:{\it A graph G is generically $3$-isostatic 
                graph if and only if it has a semi-simplicial map to the tetrahedron 
                in which all vertex packets induce subgraphs that are broken paths 
                (forests with all vertices of valence $1$ or $2$).} 
                This conjecture is false if you insist that the induced subgraphs 
                be paths. As an example, consider a hinged ring of six tetrahedra. 
                 
                Time permitting (or on another occasion during the week) we should 
                discuss computational methods for constructing the generically 
                3-rigid {\it components} of an arbitrary graph, or for finding 
                dependencies. 
             
            Dickinson, William Grand Valley State 
              University 
              Packings of Equal Circles on Flat Tori 
             
              We outline an algorithm to find all the 
                locally maximally dense packings of a fixed number of equal circles 
                on any flat torus. The algorithm uses the tools of rigidity theory 
                and topological graph theory. We have applied this to the case 
                of 3 equal circles and have determined all the locally maximally 
                dense packings on any flat torus in this case. We have also applied 
                this on upto six equal circles on certain flat and have determined 
                some other optimal arrangements. This is joint work with AnnaVictoria 
                Ellsworth and Jennifer Kenkel. 
             
            Erik Demaine, Massachusetts Institute 
              of Technology 
              Linkage Folding: From Erd\H{o}s to Proteins 
             
               
                Linkages have a long history ranging back to the 18th century 
                in the quest for mechanical conversion between circular motion 
                and linear motion, as needed in a steam engine. In 1877, Kempe 
                wrote an entire book of such mechanisms for "drawing a straight 
                line". (In mathematical circles, Kempe is famous for an attempted 
                proof of the Four-Color Theorem, whose main ideas persist in the 
                current, correct proofs.) Kempe designed many linkages which, 
                after solidification by modern mathematicians Kapovich, Millson, 
                and Thurston, establish an impressively strong result: there is 
                a linkage that signs your name by simply turning a crank. 
              Over the years mathematicians, and more 
                recently computer scientists, have revealed a deep mathematical 
                and computational structure in linkages, and how they can fold 
                from one configuration to another. In 1936, Erd\H{o}s posed one 
                of the first such problems (now solved): does repeatedly flipping 
                a pocket of the convex hull convexify a polygon after a finite 
                number of flips? This problem by itself has an intriguingly long 
                and active history; most recently, in 2006, we discovered that 
                the main solution to this problem, from 1939, is in fact wrong. 
              This talk will describe the surge of results 
                about linkage folding over the past several years, in particular 
                relating to the two problems described above. These results also 
                have intriguing applications to robotics, graphics, nanomanufacture, 
                and protein folding. 
             
            Erik Demaine, Massachusetts Institute 
              of Technology 
              Geometric Puzzles: Algorithms and 
              Complexity 
             
              
              
             
            Gortler, Steven -- Harvard 
              Characterizing Generic Global Rigidity 
             
              Consider a graph embedded in D-dimensional 
                Euclidian space, with edges drawn as straight lines. We say that 
                this embedding of the graph is globally rigid if it there is no 
                other embedding of the graph in R^d with the same edge lengths 
                (up to Euclidian transforms). Testing for global rigidity is in 
                general NP-hard. 
                In this talk, I will describe a simple way to characterize global 
                rigidity under the (mild) assumption that the embedding is "generic". 
                In particular, we prove that Connelly's sufficient condition for 
                generic global rigidity is also necessary. This condition can 
                be tested efficiently using a randomized algorithm. This characterization 
                also establishes that global rigidity is a generic property of 
                a graph and dimension.I will also briefly touch on a related characterization 
                of the universal rigidity of generic frameworks.This is joint 
                work with Alex Healy and Dylan Thurston. 
             
            Jackson, Bill and Owen, John 
              Radical/Quadratic Realisations of a Rigid Graph 
             
              Let $f_e$ denote the set of squared edge 
                distances in a framework $(G,p)$. We say that $(G,p)$ is radically 
                (respectively quadratically) solvable if $(G,p)$ is congruent 
                to a framework (G,q)$ where $q$ is in an extension field $K$ which 
                is radical (respectively of degree $2^s$ for some s) over $\rat(d_e)$. 
                We show that radically (quadratically) solvable is a generic property 
                and that $G$ is quadratically solvable in dimension 2 if $G$ is 
                globally rigid. We discuss the conjecture: if $G$ is 3-connected 
                then $G$ is radically solvable in dimension 2 only if $G$ is globally 
                rigid. 
             
            Jordan. Tibor Eotvos Lorand University 
              Geometric 
              Sensitivity of Rigid Graphs 
            Kaszanitzky, Viktória 
              Rigid two-dimensional frameworks with 
              two coincident points 
               
             
              Let G = (V;E) be a graph and u; v 2 V be 
                two designated vertices.We give a necessaryand sufficient condition 
                for the existence of a rigid two-dimensional framework (G; p), 
                inwhich u; v are coincident. This result extends a classical result 
                of Laman on the existence of a rigid framework on G. Our proof 
                leads to an efficient algorithm for testing whether G satisfies 
                the condition. 
                Joint work with Zsolt Fekete and Tibor Jordán. 
                 
             
            Lee-St. John, Audrey Mount Holyoke 
              College 
              Body-and-cad rigidity theory 
             
              Classical rigidity theory focuses on distance 
                constraints between points. For bar-and-joint rigidity, planar 
                properties are well-understood and have a combinatorial characterization 
                via Laman's Theorem; higher dimensions remain a conspicuously 
                open area. For body-and-bar structures, Tay's Theorem characterizes 
                combinatorial rigidity in all dimensions. Both Laman's and Tay's 
                Theorems lead to simple and efficient combinatorial algorithms. 
                We consider additional geometric relations by focusing on 3D body-and-cad 
                structures, which allow coincidence, angular and distance constraints 
                between points, lines and planes affixed to rigid bodies. These 
                comprise most of what is found in 3D environments of constraint-based 
                CAD software (e.g., "mates" in a SolidWorks "assembly"). 
                Initial foundations for body-and-cad rigidity theory indicate 
                its combinatorial properties lie somewhere between the well-understood 
                world of body-and-bar rigidity and the open area of 3D bar-and-joint 
                rigidity. In this talk, we present recent work on combinatorial 
                body-and-cad rigidity and discuss several applications. Joint 
                work with Jessica Sidman. 
                 
             
            Lubiw, Anna University of Waterloo 
              Reconfiguration of Graph Drawings 
             
              We expore some problems of reconfiguring 
                straight line planar graph drawings. Edges are represented as 
                straight line segments, and vertices are represented as points 
                that may move continuously in the plane. Edge lengths are not 
                necessarily preserved, but planarity must be preserved. 
                For a given planar graph and a given embedding, an older result 
                of Cairns and Thomassen shows that the configuration space is 
                connected. We discuss algorithmic versions of this, i.e. ways 
                to "morph" one straight line planar drawing to another. 
                Then we consider preserving other structure in the drawing, specifically, 
                edge directions or vertex visibilities. In the latter case, we 
                prove that any planar cycle (i.e. any polygon) can be convexified 
                without losing any vertex-to-vertex visibilities. 
             
            Maehara, Hiroshi 
               To hold a convex body by a circle 
               
             Mednykh, Alexander Sobolev Institute 
              of Mathematics, Novosibirsk,Russia 
              The Brahmahupta's theorem after 
              Coxeter. 
               
             
              The Heron's formula is well known from 
                the elementary school. It gives the area of an Euclidean triangle 
                in terms of lenghts of the sides. The non-Euclidean versions of 
                this theorem can be found, for example, in the book by E.~B. Vinberg, 
                Geometry II: Spaces of Constant Curvature, Springer-Verlag, 1993. 
                The Brahmahupta's theorem is a direct generalization of the Heron's 
                ones for the case of inscribed quadrilateral. 
                Following the ideas of Coxeter J.~E. Valentine, 1970 gave necessary 
                and sufficient conditions for four points of the hyperbolic plane 
                lie on a circle, line, horocycle, or one branch of an equidistant 
                curve. 
                In this report we use these results to find a few non-Euclidean 
                generalizations of the Brahmahupta's theorem. 
             
            Musin, Oleg R. (University of Texas 
              at Brownsville) 
              Sets with few distances 
               
             
              A finite set X in a metric space M is called 
                an s-distance set if the set of distances between any two distinct 
                points of X has size s. The main problem for s-distance sets is 
                to determine the maximum cardinality of s-distance sets for fixed 
                s and M. Let us denote by A(M, s) the maximum cardinality of s-distance 
                sets in M. In this talk, we are going to discuss upper bounds 
                for A(M, s), where M is a compact two-point homogeneous space. 
                We consider the most important cases for the coding theory, when 
                M is a sphere, the Hamming space and the Johnson space. This talk 
                is based on the following publications: O.R. Musin, Spherical 
                two-distance sets // Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A 
                116 (2009) 988995; A. Barg and O.R. Musin, Bounds on sets 
                with few distances // Journal of Combinatorial Theory Ser. A, 
                118 , no. 4, 2011, pp. 1465-1474; O.R. Musin and H. Nozaki, Bounds 
                on three- and higher-distance sets // European Journal of Combinatorics 
                32 (2011) 1182-1190.  
             
            Nixon, Tony  
              Rigidity, Circuits and Global Rigidity on the Cylinder  
             
              We discuss bar-joint frameworks in 3-dimensions 
                where the vertices are constrained to the surface of a circular 
                cylinder. We present a natural analogue of Laman's theorem characterising 
                minimal infinitesimal rigidity in this context. The appropriate 
                class of graphs are simple graphs with $2|V|-2$ edges (and the 
                associated subgraph inequality) and we give an inductive construction 
                of such graphs. We begin to consider global rigidity of such frameworks 
                by analysing the circuits of this matroid; that is simple graphs 
                with $2|V|-1$ edges such that all proper subgraphs have at most 
                $2|V'|-2$ edges. 
             
            Penne, Rudi 
              Pin merging in planar body frameworks  
            Recski,Andras Budapest University 
              of Technology and Economics 
              Characterizing minimal generic rigid graphs in the d-dimensional 
              space 
             
               
                The problem in the title is trivial for 
                  d=1, well known for d=2 and is one of the most outstanding open 
                  problems of structural rigidity for d>2. We consider this 
                  problem as determining the rank of a matrix in 
                  the ring of the multivariable polynomials, and study the various 
                  scenarios where some expansion members cancel each other. An 
                  expansion member corresponds to the decomposition of a graph 
                  into d trees such that each tree can be oriented with a priori 
                  given indegrees for every edge. Deciding the existence of such 
                  a decomposition/orientation is polynomial for d=1 but its complexity 
                  is open even for d=2. We hope that a better understanding of 
                  these scenarios will contribute towards a future generalization 
                  of Laman's theorem for d>2. 
               
             
            Ros, Lluís 
              Numerical Analysis and Navigation of Robot Linkage Configuration 
              Spaces 
             
              The aim of this talk is to provide an overview 
                of several algorithms for numerical analysis and navigation of 
                robot linkage configuration spaces, under development at the Kinematics 
                and Robot Design Group at IRI, Barcelona. In particular, algorithms 
                will be described for (1) computing all possible configurations 
                that a robot linkage can adopt, (2) obtaining the various singularity 
                loci of the linkage, and (3) finding a proper path connecting 
                two given configurations of the linkage. Along the talk, we will 
                highlight why such problems are of interest in Robotics, and mention 
                the global information that can be obtained, about the kinetostatic 
                performance of the linkage. Examples will be showed of the application 
                of the algorithms to particular linkages. 
             
            Ross, Elissa 
              The rigidity of graphs on the torus 
             
              We study the rigidity properties of an 
                n-dimensional infinite periodic framework by considering such 
                a framework as a graph embedded on an n-dimensional torus. In 
                this talk we describe a complete characterization of generic rigidity 
                for 2-dimensional frameworks on a torus of fixed dimensions, and 
                on a partially variable torus. We describe necessary conditions 
                for the rigidity of periodic frameworks on higher dimensional 
                fixed tori.  
             
            Shai, Offer Tel Aviv University, Israel 
               
              Topics in rigidity theory from the aspect of Assur Graph 
              (revised abstract) 
             
              Assur graphs are the building blocks of 
                any mechanism or structure in engineering. In this talk, the advantages 
                of using Assur Graphs in the rigidity theory community will be 
                demonstrated. It will be shown that the footprints of Assur Graphs 
                appear in many topics of rigidity theory. The initial point is 
                with the Pebble Game where for any dimension d, the directions 
                of the edges in a graph, define the decomposition of the graph 
                into Assur Graphs (Sljoka et al., 2011). As a matter of fact, 
                the d-edges directed out of every vertex are the 'd-dyad' and 
                a cyclic of d-dyads constitute an Assur Graph. Pinned Isostatic 
                graph can be defined through the correct decomposition into Assur 
                Graphs (Shai et al., 2010). Rigidity circuits (generic circuits) 
                in 2d are derived from Assur Graphs through the contraction of 
                all the pinned vertices into one vertex and vice versa; that is, 
                grounding any vertex of a rigidity circuit results in an Assur 
                Graph (Servatius et al., 2010a). There is a conjecture related 
                to 3d Assur Graphs and 3d rigidity circuits (Shai, 2008). In geometric 
                constraint systems, it is possible to use the decomposition of 
                the constraint graphs into Assur Graphs for optimization in the 
                case where changes in dimensions of the drawing are needed (Reich 
                and Shai, 2011). In Tensegrity, it is possible to construct novel 
                types of Tensegrity Assur structures (Bronfeld, 2010) that can 
                be both rigid and flexible relying on proven properties that exist 
                solely in Assur Graphs (Servatius et al., 2010b). The unique properties 
                of Tensegrity Assur Graphs were employed also to build a simulation 
                for the locomotion of a caterpillar (Omer, 2011). 
                References 
                Bronfeld, 2010, Shape change control for an Adjustable Deployable 
                Tensegrity device. M.Sc thesis, Tel-Aviv University, Israel.  
                Omer O., 2011, Employing Assur Tensegrity Structures Methods for 
                Simulating a Caterpillar Locomotion, M.Sc thesis, Tel-Aviv University, 
                Israel. 
                Reich and Shai, 2011, private communication with vice president 
                of research, Dassault Systèmes, Paris, January. 
                Servatius B., Shai O. and Whiteley W., 2010a, Combinatorial Characterization 
                of the Assur Graphs from Engineering, European Journal of Combinatorics, 
                Vol. 31, No. 4, May, pp. 1091-1104 
              Servatius B., Shai O. and Whiteley W., 
                2010b, Geometric Properties of Assur Graphs, European Journal 
                of Combinatorics, Vol. 31, No. 4, May, pp. 1105-1120. 
              Shai O., 2008, Canonical Forms for Multidimensional 
                Isostatic Frameworks, Determinate trusses, Linkages and R-tensegrity 
                Systems, Recent Progress in Rigidity Theory, July 12, Banff International 
                research Station - Canada. 
                Shai O., Sljoka A. and Whiteley W., Directed Graphs, Decompositions, 
                and Spatial Rigidity, submitted to Discrete Applied Mathematics, 
                2010. 
                Sljoka A., Shai O and Whiteley W., Checking mobility and decomposition 
                of linkages via Pebble Game Algorithm, ASME Design Engineering 
                Technical Conferences, August 28-31, 2011, Washington, USA. 
             
            Robert E Skelton UCSD 
              Optimal Complexity in Structures 
               
             
              I will show the minimal mass solution for 
                tensegrity structural systems for the fundamental load conditions: 
                bending (cantilevered) loads, compressive loads, tensile loads, 
                and torsional loads. I will show that each of these problems has 
                an optimal complexity (the total number of components). I will 
                also show a single connectivity of tensile and compressive members 
                that all yield the same dynamic model. 
             
             Sitharam, Meera and Wang, Menghan and 
              Gao, Heping  
              Cayley configuration spaces of 1-degree-of-freedom linkages 
             
              We study the 2D configuration spaces of 
                1-degree-of-freedom (dof)  
                linkages obtained by dropping a bar from a triangle-decomposable 
                linkage. The latter linkages are minimally rigid and well-studied, 
                for example, in geometric constraint solving for CAD, because 
                they are  
                quadratic-radical solvable (QRS also called ruler-and-compass 
                constructible): in other words, the point coordinates that realize 
                rational bar lengths belong to an extension field over the rationals 
                obtained by nested square-roots (solutions to a triangularized 
                quadratic system with rational coefficients). Additionally, if 
                a relative local orientation is specified for each point, then 
                there is a linear time algorithm to compute the point coordinates 
                of the unique cartesian configuration satisfying the specified 
                orientations (if one exists). To represent the 2D configuration 
                space of a 1-dof linkage, we use the set of realizable distance-values 
                for an independent non-edge f- we call this the Cayley configuration 
                space over f. This space consists of a set of intervals on the 
                real line.We are interested in various aspects of the complexity 
                of Cayley configuration spaces: 
                (a) the Cayley algebraic complexity of describing the interval 
                end points, 
                (b) the Cayley size, i.e., the number of intervals, 
                (c) the Cayley computational complexity of computing the interval 
                endpoints, as a function of the number of intervals. 
                The first question we answer is the following: consider the Cayley 
                configuration space of a 1-dof linkage G on any non-edge f such 
                that G U f is triangle-decomposable; does its Cayley complexity 
                ((a) above) depend on the choice of f? We answer this question 
                in the negative. Specifically, we show that if the interval endpoints 
                are QRS for the Cayley configuration space over some choice of 
                f, then they are QRS for any choice of f. This shows robustness 
                of the Cayley complexity measure, for 1-dof triangle decomposable 
                linkages. In addition, we give an algorithmic characterization 
                of 1-dof, triangle decomposable linkages with QRS Cayley complexity. 
                Next, we show a surprising result that (graph)planarity is equivalent 
                to QRS Cayley complexity for a natural subclass of 1-dof triangle-decomposable 
                linkages. While this is a finite forbidden minor graph characterization 
                of QRS Cayley complexity, we provide counterexamples showing impossibility 
                of such finite forbidden minor characterizations when the above 
                subclass is enlarged. Finally, we consider (b) and (c) above for 
                1-dof, triangle decomposable linkages with QRS Cayley complexity. 
                We give a natural, minimal set of local orientations whose specification 
                guarantees Cayley size of 1 and linear Cayley computational complexity. 
                Specifying fewer orientations results in a superpolynomial blow-up 
                of both the Cayley size and computational complexity, provided 
                P is different from NP. 
             
             
               
                
               
             
            Stachel, Helmuth 
              On the flexibility of Kokotsakis meshes 
             
              A Kokotsakis mesh is a polyhedral structure 
                consisting of an $n$-sided central polygon $p_0$ surrounded by 
                a belt of quadrangles or triangles such that each side $a_i$ of 
                $p_0$ is shared by an adjacent polygon $p_i$ and the relative 
                motion between cyclically consecutive neighbor polygons is a spherical 
                coupler motion. Hence, each vertex of $p_0$ is the meeting point 
                of four faces. \\  
                These structures with rigid planar faces and variable dihedral 
                angles were first studied in the thirties of the last century. 
                However, in the last years there was a renaissance. The question 
                under which conditions such meshes are flexible (infinitesimally 
                or continuously) became important for the field of discrete differential 
                geometry as well as for the theory of paper folding. \\ While 
                for arbitrary $n$ the classification of continuously flexible 
                Kokotsakis meshes is an open problem, we know since R. Bricard 
                the solution for $n=3$. For $n=4$, each nontrivial flexible example 
                includes a multiply decomposable composition of two spherical 
                four-bar mechanisms. Based on the known examples, there is a conjecture 
                that the reducibility of this composition, i.e., a 4-4-correspondance, 
                is a necessary condition for continuous flexibility. G. Nawratil 
                recently listed all reducible compositions. If the conjecture 
                holds true, a classification of all flexible quadrangular Kokotsakis 
                meshes seems to be possible. 
             
            Tanigawa, Shin-ichi 
              Rooted-tree decompositions with matroid constraints and the 
              infinitesimal rigidity of frameworks with boundaries 
              Joint work with Naoki Katoh 
            Theran, Louis  
              The rigidity transition in random graphs 
             
              If we build a framework on a generic set 
                of n points in the plane in the plane by adding bar one at a time 
                uniformly at random, after how many edges will we see a rigid 
                component larger than a triangle? How big is this rigid component 
                when it emerges, and is it unique or are there many? 
                Shiva Kasiviswanathan and Cris Moore answered these questions 
                as follows: There is a constant c_2\approx 3.588 such that, in 
                a sparse Erdos-Renyi random graph G(n,c/n): 
                * If c < c_2, all rigid components are triangles, edges, or 
                single vertices with high probability 
                * If c > c_2, then there is a unique linear-sized rigid component 
                with high probability 
                The interesting thing from a rigidity standpoint is that c_2 is 
                quite a bit below 4 and that the transition is sudden. The value 
                of c_2 had been found in simulation by Rivoire and Barre, and 
                we confirm their observations theoretically.  
             
            Whiteley, Walter York University 
              How do we generate finite motions for generically rigid graphs? 
                
             
              We will survey situations structures will 
                unexpectedly have a finite motion, for configurations generic 
                within a class of constraints. 
                (a) There are a number of examples where a symmetry can turn a 
                generically rigid graph into a graph that has finite motions, 
                while other symmetries do not have this impact. 
                (b) Circumstances where flatness of a set of points can generate 
                an infinitesimal motion that preserves the flatness also generate 
                a finite motion (e.g. K5,5 with one side coplanar). 
                (c) For braced plane discs of parallelograms and triangles, and 
                some forms of their 3D analogs, every infinitesimal is a finite 
                motion; 
                (d) Special configurations with second order flexibility are guaranteed 
                to be flexible; 
                (e) Second step flexibility, in which a first order flex at a 
                regular point of a variety is tangent to the variety; 
                (f) Sufficient points (or implied points) at infinity (including 
                slide joints). 
              We also consider when these finite motions 
                are conserved by changes of the metric or the dimension of the 
                space via coning or other geometric transformations. Our goal 
                is to also highlight some new research problems and promising 
                approaches. 
               
               
                Back to top 
                 
             
            October 
              17-21, 2011  
              Workshop on Rigidity and Symmetry  
              
            
              -  
                
Alexandrov, Victor (Sobolev Institute 
                  of Mathematics and Novosibirsk State University) 
                  The Dehn invariants of the Bricard octahedra 
                  We prove that the Dehn invariants of any Bricard octahedron 
                  remain constant during the ?ex and that the Strong Bellows Conjecture 
                  holds true for the Steffen ?exible polyhedron. 
               
              -  
                
Apel, Susanne 
                  An Invariant theoretic view on 10 points on a cubic 
                  The work presented here is 
                  from Jürgen Richter-Gebert who is not able to be present 
                  himself. Starting from a discussion with Jim Blinn which was 
                  related to invariant theoretic aspects of the Cayley-Bacharach 
                  theorem, Jürgen tried to find a bracket polynomial expressing 
                  the fact that 10 points in the projective plane lie on 
                  a common cubic curve. It is natural to ask for a homogenous 
                  polynomial of degree three (ten brackets per monomial). This 
                  is, the starting point for the investigations. Jürgen was 
                  able to find a nice and symmetric solution for this problem. 
                  However it has 30240 summands. It has analogies with the case of 
                  quadrics and the underlying concept can be generalized to curves 
                  of every degree. On the other hand using an idea of Jim Blinn, 
                  that produces a related polynomial with 12 brackets per summand 
                  and a determinatal trick, he was able to find a formula 
                  with summands to 26. However, the result is far from being 
                  symmetric. So far we were not able, to find a better solution. May 
                  it be that (in this case) symmetry and conciseness are two incompatible 
                   concepts? 
               
              - Baake, Michael and Grimm, Uwe 
 
                Aperiodic Tilings: Notions and Properties I & II 
                These two talks give an introductory account of the theory of 
                aperiodic order, focussing on aperiodic tilings of space. In particular, 
                notions of symmetry and equivalence concepts are introduced, and 
                key  
                properties are demonstrated by means of examples. The recent discovery 
                by Joan Taylor of an hexagonal monotile of the plane is discussed 
                in detail. 
                 
               
              -  
                
Borcea,Ciprian  
                  Deformations of crystal frameworks 
                  This is joint work with Ileana Streinu.  
                  We apply our deformation theory of periodic bar-and-joint frameworks 
                  to tetrahedral crystal structures. The deformation space is 
                  investigated in detail for frameworks modelled on quartz, cristobalite 
                  and tridymite. 
               
              -  
                
Conder, Marston  
                  Large groups acting on surfaces/structures of given genus, 
                  and the symmetric genus of a given group  
                  This lecture will concentrate on recent developments with regard 
                  to these questions: 
                  What is the {\em largest number of automorphisms\/} of \\ $\bullet\,$ 
                  a compact orientable surface of given genus $g > 1$ ? \\ 
                  $\bullet\,$ a compact non-orientable surface of given genus 
                  $g > 2$ ? 
                  Given a finite group $G$, what is the {\em smallest genus of 
                  faithful actions\/} of $G$ on \\ $\bullet\,$ compact orientable 
                  surfaces? \\ $\bullet\,$ compact orientable surfaces, preserving 
                  orientation? \\ $\bullet\,$ compact non-orientable surfaces? 
                  Answers to questions like these may be found by investigating 
                  properties of finite quotients of Fuchsian and non-Euclidean 
                  crystallographic groups. 
                  Some of what I will report is joint work with Tom Tucker (New 
                  York). 
                   
                 
               
              - De Saedeleer, Julie, Université 
                Libre de Bruxelles 
 
                The geometry of the groups PSL(2,q). 
                In this talk, we will describe geometric structures consisting 
                of points and lines, that have a group PSL(2,q) acting transitively 
                on the pairs of incident points and lines. We will focus on the 
                case where the group PSL(2,q) acts primitively on the points. 
                We give a complete classification of the rank two geometries of 
                the groups PSL(2,q).In the context of the search for locally s-arc-transitive 
                graphs related to families of simple groups, we give the classification 
                with one more axiom namely that the group be primitive on one 
                bipart of the vertex set. And finally we will give the most recent 
                developments on geometries of the groups PSL(,q).  
                 
               
              - Dolbilin, Nikolai, Steklov Mathematical 
                Institute, currently at the Fields Institute and Queen's University
 
                Parallelohedra and a Walk Alround the 
                Voronoi Conjecture 
                 
               
              -  
                
Fowler, Patrick W. Department 
                  of Chemistry, University of Sheffield, UK 
                  Counting with symmetry: extended versions of mobility criteria 
                  Characterisations of mobility and rigidity are often expressed 
                  in terms of necessary, though usually not sufficient, criteria 
                  embodied in counting rules. These include Maxwells 
                  rule for rigidity of frames and its extension due to Calladine, 
                  and the mobility criterion due to Gruebler and Kutzbach. The 
                  sets of objects being counted (bars, joints, mechanisms, states 
                  of self stress, rigid-body motions, freedoms of particular types 
                  of connector) have collective symmetry. If this is taken into 
                  account, the counting rules can be extended to statements about 
                  reducible representations, giving a version of the rule for 
                  each class of symmetry operations. This often sharpens the conclusions, 
                  and yields detailed information about the physical character 
                  of mechanisms, states of self stress, and so on. In this respect, 
                  each counting rule is the trace under the identity operation 
                  of an extended symmetry rule, the tip of a group-theoretical 
                  iceberg of potentially useful information. 
                  This contribution discusses some symmetry-extended counting 
                  rules in rigidity and mobility, and puts them in the context 
                  of similar considerations in chemistry, where mechanical and 
                  pictorial models are often informative, and symmetry is very 
                  often a key consideration. 
                  This is joint work with Simon D. Guest (Cambridge) 
                   
               
              -  
                
Guest, Simon 
                  Generating symmetric tensegrities 
                  Connelly showed how it was possible to generate a catalogue 
                  of symmetric tensegrities that have a single regular orbit of 
                  nodes, one orbit of struts, and two orbits of cables. I will 
                  explore how it might be possible to extend this catalogue to 
                  consider systems that have one or more orbits of nodes, which 
                  may not be regular.  
                 
               
              -  
                
Hubard, Isabel, UNAM  
                  Equivelar 4-twistoids, part I 
                  In this talk we shall consider 4-polytopes 
                  that arise as quotients of the Euclidean tessellation {4,3,4} 
                  by fixed point free crystallographic groups of the Euclidean 
                  space. 
                   
               
              -  
                
Jackson, Bill 
                  The number of 2-dimensional complex realisations of a rigid 
                  graph 
                  Given a generic realisation $(G,p)$ of a rigid graph $G$, the 
                  number of realisations of $G$ which are equivalent to $(G,p)$ 
                  and are pairwise non-congruent depends only on the graph $G$. 
                  We denote this number by $c(G)$. We determine $c(G)$ when the 
                  rigidity matroid of $G$ is connected and, in particular, show 
                  that $c(G)=1$ if and only if $G$ is 3-connected and redundantly 
                  rigid. In adition we show that the problem of determining $c(G)$ 
                  for an arbitrary rigid graph $G$ can be reduced to the case 
                  when $G$ is 3-connected and essentially 4-edge-connected. 
               
              - Jajcay, Robert, Indiana State University
 
                Restricting the Degree/Diameter 
                and Cage Problems to Vertex-Transitive Graphs 
                The Degree/Diameter Problem is the problem of finding a graph 
                of the largest possible order from the family of graphs of given 
                degree and diameter. Similarly, the Cage Problem calls for finding 
                the smallest graph of given degree and girth. Great many of the 
                extremal graphs for either of these two interconnected problems 
                are highly symmetric: either vertex-transitive or possessing large 
                automorphism groups with only few orbits. Despite this observation, 
                not much is known about the role of symmetry in extremal graph 
                theory. 
                `Based on intuition' alone, one couldeasily find arguments to 
                both support and reject the idea that high symmetry is somehow 
                essential to these problems. On one hand, it is tempting to assume 
                that the high symmetry of the best known graphs is simply due 
                to our preference toward constructions that involve symmetry. 
                Such constructions tend to be easier to organize and limit the 
                corresponding search spaces. As we get closer to the optimal bounds 
                (called the Moore bounds), we will possibly run out of such constructions 
                and will start seeing more complicated graphs with fewer automorphisms. 
                The opposing view can be supported by the idea that as the resulting 
                graphs become more and more `compact', the structural conditions 
                forced on the local neighborhoods will become more global and 
                will make the neighborhoods more alike; leading to vertex-transitivity 
                of the resulting graphs. 
                Regardless of the ultimate resolution of the role of symmetry 
                in finding graphs extremal to either of the two problems, it appears 
                obvious that further study of vertex-transitive graphs and their 
                relation to the Degree/Diameter and Cage Problems bears the potential 
                of providing us with more insights in these notoriously hard questions. 
                In our talk, we review some of the latest results obtained in 
                collaboration with Geoff Exoo, Jozef Siran and Martin Macaj. 
                 
               
              -  
                
Klambauer, Maximilian 
                  University of Toronto 
                  Equivelar maps on the Klein 
                  bottle, and a higher dimensional generalization. 
                  Given a tessellation of the 
                  Euclidean plane and a group of its symmetries generated by two 
                  glide reflections, in parallel axes with equal translational 
                  components, one can obtain a tessellation on the Klein bottle 
                  by identifying points that are in the same orbit under the group 
                  action. This idea may be generalized by taking quotients of 
                  E^n by subgroups of symmetries which are generated by pairs 
                  of glide reflections through parallel hyperplanes. In this talk, 
                  we will examine some polytopes obtained this manner.  
               
              - Kumar, Abhinav (MIT)
 
                Rigidity of spherical codes, and kissing numbers in high dimensions. 
                One way to improve spherical codes or kissing configurations is 
                to try to create space by continuously deforming them. We say 
                that a code is rigid when there are no nontrivial deformations 
                which do not decrease the minimum distance. We describe a linear 
                programming algorithm to check infinitesimal rigidity for spherical 
                codes, and apply it to the best kissing configurations known in 
                low dimensions. We also describe a related construction which 
                improves the current records for kissing numbers in dimensions 
                25 through 31. This is joint work with Henry Cohn, Yang Jiao and 
                Salvatore Torquato. 
                 
               
              -  
                
Malestein, Justin 
                  Generic combinatorial rigidity of periodic frameworks 
                  In this talk, I will discuss a Maxwell-Laman-type theorem for 
                  periodic frameworks in the plane due to L. Theran and myself. 
                  I will also sketch the main steps in the proof, namely a result 
                  on periodic direction networks and the development of some matroidal 
                  families of graphs. Several examples of frameworks will be presented. 
                   
               
              -  
                
 Mednykh, Alexander Sobolev Institute 
                  of Mathematics, Novosibirsk State University, Russia 
                  Volumes of Polyhedra 
                  in Hyperbolic and Spherical Spaces. 
                  The calculation of volume of polyhedron is very old and difficult 
                  problem. Probably, the first result in this direction belongs 
                  to Tartaglia (14991557) who found the volume of an Euclidean 
                  tetrahedron. Nowadays this formula is more known as Caley-Menger 
                  determinant. Recently it was shown by I. Kh. Sabitov (1996) 
                  that the volume of any Euclidean polyhedron is a root of algebraic 
                  equation whose coefficients are functions depending of combinatorial 
                  type and lengths of polyhedra. In hyperbolic and spherical spaces 
                  the situation is much more complicated. Gauss used the word 
                  die Dschungel in relation with volume calculation 
                  in non-Euclidean geometry. In spite of this, Janos Boyai, Nicolay 
                  Lobachevsky and Ludwig Schlafli obtained very beautiful formulae 
                  for non-Euclidean volume of a biorthogonal tetrahedron (orthoscheme). 
                  The volume of the Lambert cube and some other polyhedra were 
                  calculated by R. Kellerhals (1989), D. A. Derevnin, A. D. Mednykh 
                  (2002), A. D. Mednykh, J. Parker, A. Yu. Vesnin (2004), E. Molnar, 
                  J. Szirmai (2005) and others. The volume of hyperbolic polyhedra 
                  with at least one vertex at infinity was found by E. B. Vinberg 
                  (1992). The general formula for volume of tetrahedron remained 
                  to be unknown for a long time. A few years ago Y. Choi, H. Kim 
                  (1999), J. Murakami, U. Yano (2005) and A. Ushijima (2006) were 
                  succeeded in finding of a such formula. D. A. Derevnin, A. D. 
                  Mednykh (2005) suggested an elementary integral formula for 
                  the volume of hyperbolic tetrahedron. We note that the volume 
                  formula for symmetric tetrahedra whose opposite dihedral angles 
                  are mutually equal is rather simple. For the first time this 
                  phenomena was discovered by Lobachevsky for ideal hyperbolic 
                  tetrahedra, which is automatically symmetric. The respective 
                  result in quite elegant form was presented by J. Milnor (1982). 
                  For general case of symmetric tetrahedron the volume was given 
                  by D. A. Derevnin, A. D. Mednykh and M. G. Pashkevich (2004). 
                  Surprisedly, but a hundred years ago, in 1906 an essential advance 
                  in volume calculation for non-Euclidean tetrahedra was achieved 
                  by Italian mathematician Gaetano Sforza. It came to light during 
                  discussion of the author with Jose Maria Montesinos-Amilibia 
                  at the conference in El Burgo de Osma (Spain), August 2006.The 
                  aim of this lecture is to give a survey of the above mentioned 
                  results. 
               
              -  
                
Mitschke, Holger--Institute for 
                  Theoretical Physics, University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany 
                  Floppy frameworks as models for auxetic materials 
                  Microstructures of auxetic materials, i.e. with negative 
                  Poisson's ratio, share common structural elements which allow 
                  certain types of deformation mechanisms -- reentrant elements 
                  or rotations. This motivates the hypothesis that auxetic materials 
                  can be identified by considering the microstructure as a pin-joint-and-bar 
                  framework and their permitted mechanisms. In order to support 
                  this, a broad deformation analysis of archives of mathematical 
                  frameworks, namely tilings, and their mechanisms, based on numerical 
                  calculations of the infinitesimal floppy modes, has been accomplished. 
                  Our study of periodic planar tilings has already been fruitful 
                  to design novel auxetic elastic material. We show that elastic 
                  cellular structures, built by Ti-6-Al-4V selective electron-beam 
                  melting rapid prototyping precisely on the basis of the newly 
                  found auxetic framework, possess the same qualitative auxetic 
                  deformation behaviour [H.~Mitschke et al., Adv.~Mater.~2011, 
                  23, 2669--2674]. Poisson's ratio is only well-defined for a 
                  framework if it has a unique deformation path when a strain 
                  is applied. Frameworks where the edge equations allow more degrees 
                  of freedom are deformed in our analysis by additionally constraining 
                  spatial symmetries which can also be linked to physical constraints 
                  such as minimum of angular spring energy. The presented results 
                  are for planar frameworks only, but the numerical approach is 
                  equally suitable and has the potential to yield conceptually 
                  new truly 3D auxetic mechanisms. An open question is whether 
                  this model provides a sufficient or even necessary property 
                  of auxetic geometries, e.g. whether rigidity is an exclusion 
                  criteria for auxetic microstructures. 
                   
               
              -  
                
Mixer, Mark Fields Institute  
                  Equivelar 4-twistoids II  
                  In this talk we shall consider 4-polytopes that arise as quotients 
                  of the Euclidean tessellation {4,3,4} by fixed point free crystallographic 
                  groups of the Euclidean space. 
               
              - Offer, Shai 
                Tel-Aviv University
 
                Symmetric Frameworks with Finite Motions through Assur Graphs 
                at Singular Positions. 
                In the talk it will be demonstrated how it is possible to 
                derive frameworks, although are over braced, with a finite motion. 
                This is accomplished by employing the special singularity configuration 
                property that only Assur Graphs possess, causing all the inner 
                joints to have an infinitesimal motion. Using sliders and replications 
                results in symmetric frameworks with finite motions. Demonstrations 
                in 2d will be given in the talk and a conjecture will be presented 
                with the assertion that this method is applied for a special class 
                of 3d Assur Graphs.  
                
               
              -  
                
Owen, Megan -Fields Institute 
                  Geodesics in CAT(0) Cubical Complexes 
                  A cubical complex is a polyhedral complex in which all the cells 
                  are unit cubes. By giving each cube the Euclidean L2 metric, 
                  we get a natural metric on the whole complex. These complexes 
                  arise in such areas as geometric group theory, reconfigurable 
                  systems, and phylogenetics. If a cubical complex is globally 
                  non-positively curved or CAT(0), then there is a unique shortest 
                  path or geodesic between any two points in the complex.  
                  We give a bijection between CAT(0) cubical complexes and posets 
                  with inconsistent pairs, and show how this can be used to compute 
                  shortest paths. When the cube complex represents the space of 
                  metric trees, the geodesics can be computed in polynomial time 
                  and induce a finer polyhedral subdivision on the space. 
                   
               
              -  
                
Pellicer, Daniel UNAM 
                  Regular polygonal complexes in space 
                  A polytonal complex is an arrangement of vertices, edges and 
                  faces where the faces do not need to be planar, and more than 
                  two of them can meet at the same edge. We say that it is regular 
                  whenever its symmetry group acts transitively on its flags. 
                  I will show the full classification of the regular polygonal 
                  complexes in the Euclidean space. 
                   
               
              - Petitjean, Michel 
 
                Chirality and Symmetry Measures: some Open Problems 
                A general framework to define symmetry and chirality measures 
                is introduced. Then, we present a chirality measure (the chiral 
                index) based on an extension of the Wasserstein metric to spaces 
                of colored mixtures distributions. Connections with Procrustes 
                methods and optimal RMS superpositions are outlined. The properties 
                of the chiral index are presented, including its use as an asymetry 
                coefficient of d-variate distributions. Relations with graph automorphisms 
                groups and applications to chemistry are mentioned. Some maximally 
                dissymetric or maximally chiral figures are presented. Several 
                open problems are listed. 
                 
                 
              - Power, Stephen
 
                Space group and point group 
                symmetry equations for the Borcea-Streinu rigidity matrix of a 
                crystal framework  
                To each translationally periodic, discrete, bar-joint framework 
                (crystal framework) $C$ in $\bR^d$ and choice of period vectors 
                there is a finite matrix $R$, obtained by Borcea and Streinu, 
                whose null-space determines the infinitesimal flexes of $C$ that 
                are of affine-periodic type. (These flexes are periodic modulo 
                an affine velocity distribution.) We derive this matrix afresh 
                as a restriction of the infinite rigidity matrix $R(C)$ of $C$ 
                and obtain symmetry equations, such as $\pi_e(g)R = R\pi_v(g)$, 
                for various representations $\pi_e, \pi_v$, of the space group 
                of $C$, associated with edges and vertices. This in turn leads 
                to various symmetry adapted Maxwell-Calladine type formulae. 
                 
                 
              - Richter, David
 
                How to Draw an Edge-Colored Graph 
                Define a ``parallel drawing'' of a $d$-edge-colored graph as a 
                representation in the plane where every vertex is represented 
                by a point, every edge is represented by a segment, and the lines 
                supporting the edges sharing a common color are parallel. Call 
                a parallel drawing ``faithful'' if there is a bijection between 
                the edges of the graph and the supporting lines. The purpose of 
                this talk is to discuss the cases of this problem when $d=3$ and 
                $d=4$.  
                 
                 
              - Schulte, Egon, Northeastern University
 
                Two-Orbit Polyhedra in Ordinary Space 
                In the past few years, there 
                has been a lot of progress in the classification of highly-symmetric 
                discrete polyhedral structures in Euclidean space by distinguished 
                transitivity properties of the geometric symmetry groups. We discuss 
                recent results about two particularly interesting classes of polyhedra 
                in ordinary 3-space, each described by a "two-flag orbits" 
                condition. First we review the chiral polyhedra, which have two 
                flag orbits under the symmetry group such that adjacent flags 
                are in distinct orbits. They occur in six very large 2-parameter 
                families of infinite polyhedra, three consisting of finite-faced 
                polyhedra and three of helix-faced polyhedra. Second, we describe 
                a complete classification of finite "regular polyhedra of 
                index 2", a joint effort with Anthony Cutler. These polyhedra 
                are combinatorially regular but "fail geometric regularity 
                by a factor of 2"; in other words, the combinatorial automorphism 
                group is flag-transitive but their geometric symmetry group has 
                two flag orbits. There are 32 such polyhedra. 
                 
                 
              -  
                
Schulze, Bernd 
                  Counts for predicting symmetric motions in frameworks with 
                  applications to protein flexibility  
                  It is well-understood in biochemistry that the functioning of 
                  a protein depends both on having basic stable forms (tertiary 
                  structure) and having some residual flexibility supported within 
                  that structure. The flexibility and rigidity of proteins can 
                  be analyzed via the well developed theory of generic rigidity 
                  of body-bar frameworks. In particular, there exist fast combinatorial 
                  algorithms (such as the pebble game) for determining the rigidity 
                  of a body-bar framework. 
                  Recent theoretical work on rigidity 
                  of frameworks has modified this analysis to include the basic 
                  symmetry of some structures and predict motions which preserve 
                  this symmetry. In particular, a framework in 3-space which counts 
                  to be combinatorially minimally rigid in generic realizations 
                  (i.e., the underlying graph satisfies the count $e=6v-6$) becomes 
                  flexible when realized with 2-fold rotational symmetry. Protein 
                  dimers, formed by two copies of a protein are a good case study 
                  for the possible impact of this added flexibility, due to 2-fold 
                  rotational symmetry, as they generally self-assemble with a 
                  2-fold rotational axis, for reasons of minimal energy. What 
                  is the significance of this for the behavior of dimers, such 
                  as tryptophan repressor?We will explore this case study and 
                  describe some symmetry-adapted pebble game algorithms. 
                  Our symmetric counting methods 
                  also yield interesting results for other point group symmetries 
                  which are frequently found in proteins. For example, a 3-dimensional 
                  framework which counts to be over-braced by two ($e=6v-4$) has 
                  a finite symmetry-preserving flex when realized generically 
                  with $D_2$ symmetry, where $D_2$ is the point group generated 
                  by two half-turns about perpendicular axes. 
                  This is joint work with Adnan Sljoka 
                  and Walter Whiteley. 
                   
               
              -  
                
Servatius, Brigitte  
                  Point/Line Configurations and their Realizability  
                  A generically rigid body-pin structure, by the Molecular Theorem 
                  (2010) remains rigid even if the bodies are replaced by straight 
                  lines.Steinitz' Theorem (1910) says that a point line configuration 
                  with three points on every line and three lines through every 
                  point may be realized in the plane with at most one curved line. 
                  We want to point out some problems with Steinitz' Theorem with 
                  respect to realizations requiring points 
                  as well as lines to be distinct and to examine the relationships 
                  between these two theorems. 
                   
               
              - Streinu, Ileana 
 
                Periodic body-and-bar frameworks 
                Abstractions of crystalline materials known as periodic body-and-bar 
                frameworks are made of rigid bodies connected by fixed-length 
                bars and subject to the action of a group of translations. In 
                this paper, we give a Maxwell-Laman characterization for generic 
                minimally rigid periodic body-and-bar frameworks. As a consequence 
                we obtain efficient polynomial time algorithms for their recognition 
                based on matroid partition and pebble games. 
                This is joint work with Ciprian Borcea and Shin-ichi Tanigawa. 
                 
                 
              -  
                
Theran, Louis  
                  Generic rigidity of crystallographic frameworks 
                  Last year, Justin Malestein and I proved a Maxwell-Laman-type 
                  theorem for periodic frameworks in the plane. I'll talk about 
                  our newer Laman-type results that apply to a larger class of 
                  crystallographic groups. Along the way, some new matroidal families 
                  of graphs will come up, as well as related results on symmetric 
                  direction networks.  
                   
               
              - Thorpe,M. F. , Arizona State University
 
                Rigidity Percolation  
                Rigidity can percolate across large structures to render the whole 
                structure rigid. This is obviously important in the design of 
                buildings and in also important in molecular structures and frameworks. 
                There is a phase transition associated with rigidity percolation 
                which occurs as the number of cross braces is increased as a system 
                tends to the thermodynamic limit with an infinite number of sites 
                and edges. The earliest example studied was via the pebble game 
                algorithm on a triangular network, where each edge is present 
                independently with probability p. 
                Exact solutions are known in two cases: on a Cayley tree, where 
                rigidity percolates out from a long rigid busbar and on hierarchical 
                lattices. In the first case, the solution is obtained by using 
                atransfer matrix, and the transition is first order (collapse 
                like a house of cards), while in the second case the solution 
                is obtained via renormalization group, and the transition is second 
                order or continuous.  
                
               
             
            Back to top 
             
              October 24-27, 2011 
              Workshop on Symmetry in Graphs, Maps and Polytopes
            
              - Apel, Susanne
 
                G-Cycles - Powerful and Surprisingly Simple Objects 
                The aim in this talk is to introduce the concept of G-cycles. 
                They arise as a natural concept when analyzing a special kind 
                of automatic theorem provers for real projective incidence theorems: 
                the binomial proving method which uses determinants as first class 
                citizen objects. The basic idea of Jürgen Richter-Gebert 
                was analyzing this proving method by creating a diagrammatic representatin 
                of it. In the first place this leads to a manifold composed 
                of triangles carrying a  Ceva or Menelaus structure and constituting 
                as a whole a proof of the theorem. The glued triangles  constitute 
                a surface whose topological structure is investigated. However, 
                 in the second place, some of the constructions made in the 
                process seem not optimal. This leads to the concept of G-Cycles 
                as building blocks in the proving method (instead of Ceva 
                and Menelaus triangles). They can also be interpreted as 
                theorems about ratios of length in affine geometry and thereby 
                generalizing results from Grünbaum and Shepard. So G-Cycles 
                form generalizations of the Theorems of Ceva and Menelaus. Some 
                other special cases of G-Cycles are also already known in the 
                literature. The presentation will touch the topics incidence theorems 
                and automatic proofs of those as well as bracket algebra, 
                topology and combinatorics. 
                 
               
              - Berman, Leah 
 
                A geometric construction for new highly incident configurations 
                A geometric $k$-configuration is a collection of points and straight 
                lines in the Euclidean plane so that every point lies on $k$ lines 
                and every line passes through $k$ points. In this talk, we will 
                describe a new construction for constructing $k$-configurations 
                for any $k \geq 3$. This construction method uses only straightedge-and-compass 
                techniques, given an initial regular $m$-gon of points, to construct 
                a $k$-configuration with $m(2^{k-2})$ points and lines. It includes 
                the smallest 7-configuration (which is still rather small), as 
                well as producing new infinite families of 5- and 6-configurations. 
                 
                 
                 
              - Brooksbank, Peter
 
                Classical groups acting on polytopes 
                 
                 
                 
              -  Burgiel, Heidi
 
                A Family of Unsatisfying Graphs 
                 
                 
              - Cara, Philippe --Vrije Universietit 
                Brussel
 
                Large 
                Group actions applied to virus architecture 
                (Joint work with A. Devillers and R. Twarock) 
                It has been known for a long time that most viruses exhibit icosahedral 
                symmetry. In 1962 Caspar and Klug\cite{CaKl62} developed a theory 
                describing the structure of the protein containers that encapsulate 
                and hence protect the viral genome. The theory's main ingredients 
                are triangulations of the faces of an icosahedron. The location 
                of (centres of mass of) structural proteins is deduced from such 
                triangulations. 
                More recently Keef and Twarock\cite{KeTw09} extended the Caspar--Klug 
                theory using more general tilings of the icosahedron and superpositions 
                of several tilings. Now more structural details can be explained 
                as well as the organisation of the viral genome inside the icosahedral 
                capsid. In this theory many mathematical objects like quasicrystals, 
                groups, lattices, etc. interact to provide more insight. 
                We clarify these interactions and provide a more uniform mathematical 
                framwork based on group actions. 
                \begin{thebibliography}{99} 
                \bibitem{CaKl62} Caspar D.L.D. and Klug A., 
                \emph{Physical principles in the construction of regular viruses}, 
                Cold Spring Harbor Symp. 27:1--24, 1962. 
                \bibitem{KeTw09} Keef, T. and Twarock, R., 
                \emph{Affine extensions of the icosahedral group with applications 
                to the three-dimensional organisation of simple viruses}, 
                J. Math. Biol. 59: 287-313, 2009. 
                \end{thebibliography} 
                 
               
              -  
                
Conder, Marston 
                  The ubiquity of alternating groups (as automorphism groups 
                  of symmetric structures)  
                  There are several contexts in which finite alternating groups 
                  occur as the automorphism group (or orientation-preserving automorphism 
                  group) of a discrete structure with maximum possible symmetry 
                  under certain constraints. In fact, it frequently happens that 
                  all but finitely many $A_n$ appear in the given context, and 
                  sometimes all but finitely many symmetric groups $S_n$ occur 
                  as well (or instead). % Examples include {\em Hurwitz surfaces\/} 
                  (compact Riemann surfaces of genus $g > 1$ with $84(g-1)$ 
                  conformal automorphisms), or equivalently, {\em regular maps\/} 
                  of type $\{3,7\}$, and also {\em $5$-arc-transitive cubic graphs}, 
                  {\em $7$-arc-transitive $4$-valent graphs}, and {\em hyperbolic 
                  $3$-manifolds of largest possible symmetry-to-volume ratio}. 
                  % I will explain some of these, as well as a very recent one 
                  ({\em locally 9-arc-transitive bipartite graphs}), and the possibility 
                  that for every $r \ge 3$, all but finitely many $A_n$ and $S_n$ 
                  occur as the automorphism group of a {\em chiral polytope\/} 
                  of rank $r$. 
               
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Cunningham, Gabe  
        Constructing self-dual chiral polytopes 
                  Abstract: A polytope is chiral if its automorphism group has 
                  two orbits on the flags, such that adjacent flags belong to 
                  distinct orbits. The mixing operation for chiral polytopes constructs 
                  the minimal common cover of two given polytopes. To construct 
                  self-dual chiral polytopes, we mix a chiral polytope with its 
                  dual or with the mirror image of its dual. This always yields 
                  something which is self-dual, but it may not be chiral or polytopal. 
                  However, there are several simple criteria that can, in many 
                  cases, settle the question of chirality and polytopality.  
                   
                 
               
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Ehrenborg, Richard 
                  Euler flag enumeration of Whitney stratified spaces 
                  The flag vector contains all the face incidence data 
                  of a polytope, and in the poset setting, the chain enumerative 
                  data. It is a classical result due to Bayer and Klapper that 
                  for face lattices of polytopes, and more generally, Eulerian 
                  graded posets, the flag vector can be written as a cd-index, 
                  a non-commutative polynomial which removes all the linear redundancies 
                  among the flag vector entries. This result holds for regular 
                  CW complexes. We relax the regularity conditions to show the 
                  cd-index exists for manifolds whose boundary has a Whitney stratification. 
                  The setting of Whitney stratifications allows us to give shorter 
                  proofs of identities involving the cd-index and opens inequality 
                  questions. 
                  This is joint work with Mark Goresky and Margaret Readdy. 
               
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Herman, Allen 
                  The Schur Indices of irreducible 
                  characters of the groups of abstract regular polytopes 
                  In 2001, McMullen and Monson noted an example of an irreducible 
                  character $\chi$ of the automorphism group $\Gamma$ of the abstract 
                  regular polytope $\{5,5\}_5$ with Frobenius-Schur indicator 
                  $FS(\chi) = 0$, and asked whether or not there could exist examples 
                  with $FS(\chi) = -1$. In algebraic terms, this is asking if 
                  there is a simple component of the real group algebra $\mathbb{R}\Gamma$ 
                  that is a matrix ring over the real quaternion algebra. 10 years 
                  later, the question remains open. In my talk I will survey what 
                  is known about this problem, and give an overview of what is 
                  known about the analogous problems for Weyl groups, finite Coxeter 
                  groups, and finite unitary reflection groups.  
               
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Helfand, Ilanit 
                  Constructions of Polytopes with Preassigned Automorphism 
                  Group and Number of Flag Orbits 
                  It is known that given a string C-group it is possible to construct 
                  an abstract regular polytope, P, whose group of automorphisms 
                  is isomorphic to that string C-group. This talk will explore 
                  the conditions under which it is possible to construct an abstract 
                  polytope whose automorphism group is isomorphic to a given string 
                  C-group, and which has a preassigned number of flag orbits, 
                  greater than one. We will also discuss some of the properties 
                  of a collection of polytopes which fulfill these parameters. 
               
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Hubard, Isabel UNAM 
                  Colourful polytopes and graphs  
                  In this talk we shall construct abstract polytopes from n-regular 
                  graphs with chromatic index n. In particular we'll see some 
                  Cayley graphs, as well as the flag-graph of any polytope, as 
                  1-skeletons of abstract polytopes.  
               
              -  
                
Johnson, Norman W.  
                  Basic System of Integers 
                  A subset of one of the algebraic systems C, H, or O is a basic 
                  system of integers if:  
                  (1) the trace and the norm of each element are rational integers; 
                   
                  (2) the elements form a discrete subring of C, H, or O with 
                  the units forming a finite multiplicative group or loop; and 
                   
                  (3) when C, H, or O is taken as a two-, four-, or eight- dimensional 
                  vector space over R, the elements are the points of a two-, 
                  four-, or eight-dimensional lattice spanned by the units. The 
                  ring of rational integers can be regarded as a one-dimensional 
                  basic system. The rings of Gaussian and Eisenstein complex integers 
                  are well known. A. I. Weiss and I proved that there are exactly 
                  three basic systems of integral quaternions. Here I show that 
                  there are just four such systems of octonions. As lattice points, 
                  the integers of each basic system are the vertices of some regular 
                  or uniform Euclidean honeycomb of dimension 1, 2, 4, or 8. 
                   
               
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Jones, Gareth 
                  Beauville surfaces and groups 
                  A Beauville surface is a complex surface (hence a 4-dimensional 
                  real manifold) constructed as the quotient of a cartesian product 
                  of two regular dessins (i.e. orientably regular hypermaps) of 
                  genus at least 2 by a finite group acting freely on this product. 
                  Although they are of considerable interest to algebraic geometers 
                  (e.g. for their rigidity properties), the construction and investigation 
                  of these surfaces are essentially group-theoretic and combinatorial 
                  activities. I shall survey recent results on which groups can 
                  act in the above way, and which groups can arise as the automorphism 
                  groups of Beauville surfaces. Much of this is joint work with 
                  Yolanda Fuertes, Gabino Gonzalez-Diez and David Torres-Teigell. 
                 
               
              -  
                
Karab\'a\v s, J\'an  
                  Classification of orientable 
                  edge-transitive maps 
                  An orientable map is edge-transitive if and only if its 
                  medial is a vertex-transitive map. Hence, using the techniques 
                  for the classification and construction of vertex transitive 
                  maps we obtain the classification of edge-transitive maps on 
                  orientable surfaces. 
                  The orientation-preserving automorphism group of a medial map 
                  is of index at most two in the automorphism group of a medial 
                  map.  
                  Hence we know, that the quotient of a medial map has at most 
                  two vertices. The lifting technique 
                  can be used for the construction. 
                  Orientation-preserving automorphisms of an edge-transitive map 
                  are \emph{face colour-preserving}, i. e. they cannot act as 
                  a duality in the medial map. The number of possible quotient 
                  maps significantly decreases, in particular there are just six 
                  quotient maps to consider. In the case of two-vertex quotient, 
                  $\bar{M}$, of a medial map, $M$, the automorphism group of the 
                  respective (medial) map must contain an automorphism $\phi$ 
                  such that $\phi$ projects onto an automorphism of the quotient, 
                  transposing the two vertices of $\bar{M}$ and preserving the 
                  face-colouring of $\bar{M}$. These conditions gives to rise 
                  to \emph{seven} infinite families of edge-transitive maps. Using 
                  techniques of voltage assignments we can reconstruct all edge-transitive 
                  maps of given genus or up to given number of edges. 
               
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Kutnar, Klavdija  
                  Cubic Cayley graphs and snarks 
                  In this talk I will discuss the well-known conjecture that there 
                  are no snarks amongst Cayley graphs. 
                  I will present an innovative approach in solving this conjecture 
                  combining the theory of Cayley maps and the existence of independent 
                  set of vertices whose complement induces a forest regularly 
                  on the set of arcs with cyclic vertex stabilizer, together with 
                  some partial results obtained thus far. 
                  This is a joint work with Ademir Hujdurovic and Dragan Marusic. 
               
              -  
                
Leemans, Dimitri 
                  Polytopes of high rank arising from almost simple groups 
                  In this talk, we will present results obtained the last few 
                  years on abstract regular polytopes constructed for some families 
                  of almost simple groups. 
               
              -  
                
Leopold, Undine , Northeastern 
                  University 
                  Polyhedral Realizations & Non-Realizability for Vertex-Minimal 
                  Triangulations of Closed Surfaces 
                  A polyhedral realization of a triangulated 2-manifold is a simplex-wise 
                  linear embedding into R^3 in the orientable case, or a simplex-wise 
                  linear immersion in the non-orientable case. It is an open question 
                  how many vertices are minimally needed for a realizable triangulation 
                  of any particular 2-manifold. Progress has been made in recent 
                  years with the aid of computer programs, but few results are 
                  known in the non-orientable case. As such, a large part of the 
                  talk will focus on geometric and topological constraints preventing 
                  realizability in the non-orientable case. It is possible to 
                  prove, for example, that neither of the two minimal 9-vertex-triangulations 
                  for the projective plane with two handles is polyhedrally realizable. 
                  In an attempt to narrow the bounds from both sides, the speaker 
                  will also present results concerning realizations with certain 
                  symmetries and few vertices which have been obtained by an adapted 
                  computer heuristic. Combining these approaches lead to new minimality 
                  results. For the projective plane with two handles 10 vertices 
                  suffice, which makes the corresponding realizations vertex-minimal. 
                  This work was done as part of the speaker's undergraduate thesis 
                  advised by Ulrich Brehm at TU Dresden, Germany. 
                 
               
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Malnic, Aleksander 
                   
                  On the split structure of lifted groups 
                   
               
              -  
                
Marusic, Dragan 
                  On some open problems in group actions on graphs  
                  I will discuss some of my favorite problems dealing with graphs 
                  admitting transitive group actions. 
                  In particular, I will present partial results about 
                  - the interplay between semiregular automorphisms and imprimitivity 
                  block systems in graphs; and 
                  - strongly regular bicirculants, in relation to the problem 
                  of obtaining a CFSG-free proof of nonexistence of simply primitive 
                  groups of degree 2p. 
                   
               
              -  
                
      
Macaj, Martin 
        Nonorientable Regular Maps and Residual Finiteness 
        of Triangle Groups (slides) 
        It is well known that for any given hyperbolic pair (k ,m) there exist 
        infinitely many regular maps of valence k and face lengthm on an orientable 
        surface, with automorphism group isomorphic to a linear fractional group. 
        A nonorientable analogue of this result was known to be true for all pairs 
        (k ,m) as above with at least one even entry. In this paper we establish 
        the existence of such regular maps on nonorientable surfaces for all hyperbolic 
        pairs. The material presented is a result of a joint work with Gareth 
        A. 
                  Jones and Jozef irn. 
               
              -  
                
 Mednykh, Alexander Sobolev Institute 
                  of Mathematics, Novosibirsk, Russia 
                  Enumeration of Coverings, Maps and 
                  Hypermaps 
                  In this lecture we present a new method to count finite sheeted 
                  coverings of manifolds with a finitely generated fundamental 
                  group. The details can be found in [1] and [2]. We apply it 
                  to count branched and unbranched coverings over compact surfaces 
                  ([2],\,[3]). 
                  As a consequence, we suggest a new approach to count maps on 
                  surfaces up to orientation preserving homeomorphism. The further 
                  development of the method gives us a possibility to count sensed 
                  maps and hypermaps by number of edges on a closed orientable 
                  surface ([3],\,[4]). 
                  REFERENCES 
                  1. A. Mednykh, R. Nedela: Enumeration of unrooted maps of a 
                  given genus. \textit{J. Comb. Theory, Ser. B } 96(5): 706-729 
                  (2006). 
                  2. A. Mednykh: Counting conjugacy classes of subgroups in a 
                  finitely generated group.\textit{ Journal of Algebra} 320: 2209-2217 
                  (2008). 
                  3. A. Breda d'Azevedo, A. Mednykh, R. Nedela: Enumeration of 
                  maps regardless of genus: 
                  Geometric approach. \textit{Discrete Mathematics } 310(6-7): 
                  1184-1203 (2010). 
                  4. A. Mednykh, R. Nedela: Enumeration of unrooted hypermaps 
                  of a given genus. \textit{Discrete Mathematics} 310(3): 518-526 
                  (2010). 
               
              -  
                
Mohar, Bojan  Simon Fraser University 
                  Large clique minors in vertex transitive graphs 
                 
               
             
             
              An important (yet unpublished) theorem 
                of Babai states that there exists a function $f: N \to N$ so that 
                every finite vertex  
                transitive graph without $K_n$ as a minor is either $(f(n),f(n))$-ring-like 
                or is a vertex transitive map on the torus. Applying a recent 
                theorem of the authors about separations in vertex transitive 
                graphs, we obtain a relatively short proof of Babai's theorem 
                with explicit values for $f(n)$. The starting point is that graphs 
                of bounded tree-width have small separations and this leads to 
                a ring-like structure. Otherwise, there is a large grid minor. 
                This yields a $K_n$ minor unless the graph is locally planar, 
                and we show that this gives rise to a vertex transitive map. Finally, 
                a ball packing argument is used to prove that the combinatorial 
                curvature of this map is zero; otherwise there is a dense graph 
                contained as a minor, and this yields $K_n$ minor. The last step 
                is to eliminate the Klein bottle, ending up with a toroidal map. 
                This talk is a joint work with Matt DeVos. 
               
             
            
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Nedela, Roman 
                  Vertex transitive and edge transitive polytopes and 2-dimensional 
                  orbifolds 
                 
               
              -  
                
Piggott, Adam  
                  The symetries of McCullough-Miller Space 
                  Given a group W and a fixed decomposition of W as a free product, 
                  the symmetric outer automorphism group of W consists of those 
                  outer automorphisms of W which first permute the free factors, 
                  and then conjugate each free factor. McCullough-Miller's  
                  space X=X(W) is a simplicial complex on which the symmetric 
                  outer automorphism group of W acts.  
                  We will discuss the question of just how well X models the full 
                  outer automorphism group of W. In particular, we consider circumstances 
                  under which Aut(X) is precisely Out(W). 
               
              -  
                
Schulte, Egon , Northeastern University 
                  Few-Orbit Polytopes 
                  Among abstract or geometric 
                  polytopes, the regular polytopes stand out as those with maximal 
                  symmetry---their combinatorial automorphism group or geometric 
                  symmetry group has just one orbit on the flags. We discuss various 
                  classes of polytopes with few flag orbits under the respective 
                  group. Important classes include chiral polytopes, and more 
                  generally two-orbit polytopes, as well as "alternating" 
                  semiregular polytopes. We report about joint work with Antonio 
                  Breda and Gareth Jones, as well as with, separately, Isabel 
                  Hubard and Barry Monson. 
               
              -  
                
Siran, Jozef (Open University 
                  and Slovak University of Technology) 
                  External symmetries of regular and orientably regular maps 
                  A map on a surface (orientable or not) is said to be regular 
                  if its automorphism group is regular on flags, and a map on 
                  an orientable surface is orientably regular if its orientation 
                  preserving automorphism group is regular on darts. An (orientably) 
                  regular map may admit `external symmetries', that is, self-dualities 
                  and exponents (also known as hole operators) that do not preserve 
                  the map like automorphisms do, but still produce an isomorphic 
                  copy of the map. Such symmetries generate a group which we call 
                  the external symmetry group of a map. In the talk we will survey 
                  various ways of constructing regular and orientably regular 
                  maps with `small' and `large' external symmetry groups and address 
                  the question about structure of these groups.  
                   
                   
               
              -  
                
Skoviera, Martin Comenius University, 
                  Bratislava 
                  Regular maps with nilpotent automorphism 
                  groups  
               
             
             
              According to a folklore result, every regular 
                map on an orientable surface with abelian automorphism group belongs 
                to one of three infinite families of maps with one or two vertices. 
                Here we deal with regular maps whose automorphism group is nilpotent. 
                We show that each such map decomposes into a direct product of 
                two maps H x K, where Aut(H) is a 2-group and K is a map with 
                a single vertex and an odd number of semiedges. Many important 
                properties of nilpotent maps follow from this decomposition. We 
                show, for example, that apart from two well-defined classes of 
                maps on at most two vertices and their duals, every nilpotent 
                regular map has both its valency and face-size divisible by 4. 
                We give a complete classification of nilpotent regular maps of 
                nilpotency class 2 and 3, and prove that for every positive integer 
                c there are only finitely many simple regular maps whose automorphism 
                group is nilpotent of class c. This is a joint work with Y. F. 
                Ban, S. F. Du, Y. Liu, A. Malni\v c, and R. Nedela. 
                  
             
            
              -  
                
Tucker, Thomas  
                  Map 
                  Gaps 
                  Call the non-negative integer 
                  $g $ a {\em gap} for a certain type of symmetric map if there 
                  is no surface of genus $g$ containing a map of that type. This 
                  talk will discuss gap phenomena in a wide variety of contexts. 
                  For example, chiral regular maps and nondegenerate regular maps 
                  (no primal or dual multiple edges) both have gaps at $g=p+1$, 
                  for $p>12$ prime and $p \not\equiv 1$ mod $6,8$ or $10$, 
                  by recent work of Conder, \v Sir\`a\v n, and Tucker. Computer 
                  lists for some of the Graver-Watkins types of edge-transitive 
                  maps have gaps for low genus, although it is not known whether 
                  any type other than chiral regular maps have infinitely many 
                  gaps. There are also gap questions for groups acting on surfaces. 
                  For the strong symmetric genus $\sigma^o(G)$, there are no gaps, 
                  but the question is open for the symmetric genus $\sigma(G)$. 
                  One can fix a group $G$ and ask for all $g$ such that $G$ acts 
                  (faithfully) on the surface of genus $g$. By Kulkarni's Theorem 
                  one can determine all but finitely many such $g$, but even for 
                  cyclic groups those finitely many can be impossible to determine 
                  (for number theoretic reasons). Similar questions for non-orientable 
                  surfaces will also be discussed.  
                   
               
              -  
                
Weiss, Richard 
                  Buildings and s-transitive graphs 
                  Abstract: The notion of an s-transitive graph was introduced 
                  by William Tutte, who showed 65 years ago that finite s-transitive 
                  trivalent graphs exist only for s at most 5. In this talk we 
                  will give a survey of results on s-transitive graphs and the 
                  connection between s-transitive graphs and the theory of buildings. 
                   
               
              -  
                
Williams, Gordon  
                  On the Minimal Regular Covers of the Polyhedral Prisms 
                  and Anti-Prisms 
                  Abstract polytopes are partially ordered sets that mimic 
                  many of the combinatorial properties of the face lattice of 
                  a polytope. The most symmetric class of these objects are called 
                  regular abstract polytopes; these are well understood because 
                  of their correspondence to a special class of groups generated 
                  by involutions known as string C-groups. Less well understood 
                  are the abstract polytopes that lack this high degree of symmetry. 
                  In 1999, Michael Hartley developed a theoretical framework for 
                  representing any abstract poly- tope as a quotient of some regular 
                  abstract polytope. Since then, the investigation of the structure 
                  of these quotient representations has been an active area of 
                  inquiry. In many instances it is possi- ble to identify a unique 
                  minimal regular cover for a given polytope (though not all polytopes 
                  have minimal covers!). In the current work we provide the first 
                  explicit descriptions of minimal regular covers for an infinite 
                  family of polytopes, namely, the convex prisms and anti-prisms. 
                  This talk will describe some of the tools developed to tackle 
                  this problem and discuss the representations, as well as present 
                  some related open problems in the field. 
                  This talk incorporates joint work with Michael Hartley, Barry 
                  Monson and Daniel Pellicer. 
               
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