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Claus
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My recommendation, try Lando and Zvonkin (2004): Graphs on Surfaces and Their Applications.

I think it is a great book which applies graphs embedded on surfaces to solving problems from other fields of mathematics. The style is very refreshing, vivid, and lively, I would say. The style reminded me of Hatcher's chapter 0 in his Algebraic Topology text, and of Matousek's book "Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem".

I would think the target audience of this book is graduate and research level, for some topics the pace is high. Exellent list of references, I think over 300.

Edit: I was just thinking, maybe the following quote from this book gives you a good indication. The authors are talking about a topological graph here:

"It is not merely a topological object, a graph embedded into (or drawn on) a two-dimensional surface. It is also a sequence of permutations (or, if you prefer, it "is encoded by" a sequence of permutations), which provides a relation to group theory. And it is at the same time a way of representing a ramified covering of the sphere by a compact two-dimensional manifold. Considering the sphere as the Riemann complex sphere we obtain, on the covering manifold, the structure of a Riemann surface. And Riemann surfaces rarely walk by themselves. Usually they keep company with Galois theory, with algebraic curves, moduli spaces and many other exciting subjects."

My recommendation, try Lando and Zvonkin (2004): Graphs on Surfaces and Their Applications.

I think it is a great book which applies graphs embedded on surfaces to solving problems from other fields of mathematics. The style is very refreshing, vivid, and lively, I would say. The style reminded me of Hatcher's chapter 0 in his Algebraic Topology text, and of Matousek's book "Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem".

I would think the target audience of this book is graduate and research level, for some topics the pace is high. Exellent list of references, I think over 300.

My recommendation, try Lando and Zvonkin (2004): Graphs on Surfaces and Their Applications.

I think it is a great book which applies graphs embedded on surfaces to solving problems from other fields of mathematics. The style is very refreshing, vivid, and lively, I would say. The style reminded me of Hatcher's chapter 0 in his Algebraic Topology text, and of Matousek's book "Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem".

I would think the target audience of this book is graduate and research level, for some topics the pace is high. Exellent list of references, I think over 300.

Edit: I was just thinking, maybe the following quote from this book gives you a good indication. The authors are talking about a topological graph here:

"It is not merely a topological object, a graph embedded into (or drawn on) a two-dimensional surface. It is also a sequence of permutations (or, if you prefer, it "is encoded by" a sequence of permutations), which provides a relation to group theory. And it is at the same time a way of representing a ramified covering of the sphere by a compact two-dimensional manifold. Considering the sphere as the Riemann complex sphere we obtain, on the covering manifold, the structure of a Riemann surface. And Riemann surfaces rarely walk by themselves. Usually they keep company with Galois theory, with algebraic curves, moduli spaces and many other exciting subjects."

Source Link
Claus
  • 6.9k
  • 4
  • 25
  • 45

My recommendation, try Lando and Zvonkin (2004): Graphs on Surfaces and Their Applications.

I think it is a great book which applies graphs embedded on surfaces to solving problems from other fields of mathematics. The style is very refreshing, vivid, and lively, I would say. The style reminded me of Hatcher's chapter 0 in his Algebraic Topology text, and of Matousek's book "Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem".

I would think the target audience of this book is graduate and research level, for some topics the pace is high. Exellent list of references, I think over 300.