The Bernardi process and torsor structures on spanning trees
Matthew Baker, Yao Wang

TL;DR
This paper explores the Bernardi process on ribbon graphs, establishing a torsor structure on spanning trees linked to the Picard group, and shows its equivalence to rotor-routing in planar graphs, with implications for graph planarity and duality.
Contribution
It introduces a torsor structure on spanning trees via the Bernardi process and proves its equivalence to rotor-routing in planar graphs, connecting graph planarity with algebraic structures.
Findings
Bernardi bijection induces a Picard group action on spanning trees
For planar graphs, the Bernardi torsor is independent of vertex choice
Bernardi and rotor-routing torsors coincide in planar graphs
Abstract
Let G be a ribbon graph, i.e., a connected finite graph G together with a cyclic ordering of the edges around each vertex. By adapting a construction due to O. Bernardi, we associate to any pair (v,e) consisting of a vertex v and an edge e adjacent to v a bijection between spanning trees of G and elements of the set Pic^g(G) of degree g divisor classes on G, where g is the genus of G. Using the natural action of the Picard group Pic^0(G) on Pic^g(G), we show that the Bernardi bijection gives rise to a simply transitive action \beta_v of Pic^0(G) on the set of spanning trees which does not depend on the choice of e. A plane graph has a natural ribbon structure (coming from the counterclockwise orientation of the plane), and in this case we show that \beta_v is independent of v as well. Thus for plane graphs, the set of spanning trees is naturally a torsor for the Picard group.…
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