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Displaying similar documents to “Half-twists and equations in genus 2.”

On ovals on Riemann surfaces.

Grzegorz Gromadzki (2000)

Revista Matemática Iberoamericana

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We prove that k (k ≥ 9) non-conjugate symmetries of a Riemann surface of genus g have at most 2g - 2 + 2(9 - k) ovals in total, where r is the smallest positive integer for which k ≤ 2. Furthermore we prove that for arbitrary k ≥ 9 this bound is sharp for infinitely many values of g.

Moduli spaces of abelian differentials : the principal boundary, counting problems, and the Siegel-Veech constants

Alex Eskin, Howard Masur, Anton Zorich (2003)

Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS

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A holomorphic 1-form on a compact Riemann surface S naturally defines a flat metric on S with cone-type singularities. We present the following surprising phenomenon: having found a geodesic segment (saddle connection) joining a pair of conical points one can find with a nonzero probability another saddle connection on S having the same direction and the same length as the initial one. A similar phenomenon is valid for the families of parallel closed geodesics. We give a complete description...

A family of M-surfaces whose automorphism groups act transitively on the mirrors.

Adnan Melekoglu (2000)

Revista Matemática Complutense

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Let X be a compact Riemmann surface of genus g > 1. A symmetry T of X is an anticonformal involution. The fixed point set of T is a disjoint union of simple closed curves, each of which is called a mirror of T. If T fixes g +1 mirrors then it is called an M-symmetry and X is called an M-surface. If X admits an automorphism of order g + 1 which cyclically permutes the mirrors of T then we shall call X an M-surface with the M-property. In this paper we investigate those M-surfaces...