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I'm trying to list the connected 3-sheeted covering spaces of $S^1 \vee S^1$ up to isomorphism. I know what the answer is; I've seen listings.

My question is, if I'm deriving this, how do I know I've got all the covers?

Is there a nice combinatorial or graph theoretic way to count the number of covers or systematically exhaust the possibilities? Any such cover is a two-oriented connected graph with three vertices... is there a nice way to count these?

I've seen that this question was asked before, but the answers didn't address the issue of making sure all covers are found. Thanks.

ec92
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    A general fact is that $k$-sheeted (nontrivial) covers of $X$ correspond to index $k$ subgroups of $\pi_1(X)$. Unfortunately, the only way I know how to count index $k$ subgroups of the free group on 2 generators is by counting $k$-sheeted coverings of a wedge of two circles! See also http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/9705/finding-subgroups-of-a-free-group-with-a-specific-index, especially the third answer for some details. – Jason DeVito - on hiatus Feb 26 '13 at 20:07

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