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Projective plane

 

 

 

 

 

Projective plane


 
 


In mathematicsMathematics

Mathematics is the discipline that deals with concepts such as quantity, structure, space and change....
, a projective plane has two possible definitions, one of them coming from linear algebraLinear algebra

Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics concerned with the study of vectors, vector spaces , linear transformations, and...
, and another (which is more general) coming from axiomatic and finite geometryFinite geometry

A finite geometry is any geometric system that has only a finite number of points....
. The first definition quickly produces planes that are homogeneous spaceHomogeneous space Summary

In mathematics, in particular in the theory of Lie groups, algebraic groups and topological groups, a homogeneous space for ...
s for some of the classical groupFacts About Classical group

The classical Lie groups are four infinite families of Lie groups closely related to the symmetries of Euclidean spaces....
s, including the real projective plane . The second is suitable for an exhaustive study of the simple incidenceIncidence (geometry)

In geometry, the relations of incidence are those such as 'lies on' between points and lines, and 'intersects'....
 properties of plane geometryPlane geometry

In mathematics, plane geometry may mean:...
.

Visualising the real projective plane


In the projective plane , a point is represented by the homogeneous coordinate . If we think of as a point in real space with the third value of the homogeneous coordinate as a value in the direction, then can be visualized as

Points, rays, lines, and planes


A line in can be represented by the equation . If we treat , and as the column vector and , , as the column vector then the equation above can be written in matrix form as:

or

Or using vector notation

or

sweeps out a plane that goes through zero in and

sweeps out a ray ( a ray goes through zero).

The plane and ray are subspacesFacts About Euclidean subspace

In linear algebra, an Euclidean subspace is a set of vectors that is closed under addition and scalar multiplication....
 in . A subspace always goes through zero.

Ideal points



In the equation of a line is
and this equation can represent a line on any plane parallel to the plane by multiplying the equation by .

If we have a normalized homogeneous coordinate. All points that have create a plane. Let's pretend we are looking at that plane and there are two parallel lines drawn on the plane. From where we are standing we can see only so much of the plane (the area outlined in red). If we walk away from the plane along the z axis we can see more of the plane. In our field of view original points have moved. We can reflect this movement by dividing the homogeneous coordinate by a constant. In the image to the right we have divided by 2 so the value now becomes 0.5. If we walk far enough away what we are looking at becomes a point in the distance. As we walk away we see more and more of the parallel lines. The lines will meet at a line at infinity ( a line that goes through zero on the plane at ). Lines on the plane when are ideal points. The plane at is the line at infinity.

The homogeneous point is where all the real points go when you're looking at the plane from an infinite distance, a line on the plane is where parallel lines intersect.

Duality


In the equation there are two column vectorColumn vector

In linear algebra, a column vector is an m × 1 matrix, i.e....
s. You can keep either constant and vary the other. If we keep the point constant and vary the coefficients we create new lines that go through the point. If we keep the coefficients constant and vary the points that satisfy the equation we create a line. We look upon as a point because the axes we are using are and . If we instead plotted the coefficients using axis marked
points would become lines and lines would become points. If you prove something with the data plotted on axis marked and the same argument can be used for the data plotted on axis marked and . That is duality.
Lines joining points and intersection of lines (using duality)
The equation calculates the inner productDot product

In mathematics, the dot product, also known as the scalar product, is a binary operation which takes two vectors over ...
 of two column vectors. The inner product of two vectors is zero if the vectors are orthogonal. To find the line between the points and you must find the column vector that satisfies the equations and , that is we must find a column vector that is orthogonal to and . The cross productCross product

In mathematics, the cross product is a binary operation on vectors in a three-dimensional Euclidean space....
 will find such a vector. The line joining two points is given by the equation .

To find the intersection of two lines you look to duality. If you plot in the coefficient space you get rays. To find the point that is orthogonal to the two rays you find the cross product. That is .

Projective transformation

A projective Transformation in space is an invertible mapping of points in to points in that maps lines to lines. A projectivity has the equation:
. Where is an invertible matrix. This is, a projectivity is any conceivable invertible linear transform of homogeneous coordinates.

Combinatorial definition


According to the more general, combinatorial definition, a projective plane consists of
a set of lines and a set of points, and a relation between points and lines called incidence, having the following properties:

The second condition means that there are no parallel linesParallel Lines

Parallel Lines, released in 1978, was the third album from the band Blondie, and also their most popular and best sellin...
. The last condition simply excludes some degenerate cases (see below).

Examples


A projective plane is an abstract mathematical concept, so the "lines" need not be anything resembling ordinary lines,
nor need the "points" resemble ordinary points. The most common projective plane is the real projective planeReal projective plane

In mathematics, the real projective plane is the space of lines in R3 passing through the origin....
, which is a topological surfaceSurface

In mathematics, specifically in topology, a surface is a two-dimensional manifold....
 with surprising geometric properties; after that is the complex projective planeComplex projective plane

In mathematics, the complex projective plane, usually denoted CP2, is the two-dimensional complex projective space....
 of algebraic geometryAlgebraic geometry Summary

Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which, as the name suggests, combines abstract algebra, especially commutative...
, a topological four-dimensional manifoldManifold

A manifold is an abstract mathematical space in which every point has a neighborhood which resembles Euclidean space, but in...
. For any fieldField (mathematics) Summary

In abstract algebra, a field is an algebraic structure in which the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and ...
 K, there is a projective plane with three homogeneous coordinatesHomogeneous coordinates

In mathematics, homogeneous coordinates, introduced by August Ferdinand Mbius, allow affine transformations to be easily rep...
 in K, which can also be thought of in terms of a three-dimensional vector spaceVector space

In mathematics, a vector space is a collection of objects that, informally speaking, may be scaled and added....
 V over K, 'points' being one-dimensional subspaces and 'lines' two-dimensional subspaces.


The smallest possible projective plane is the Fano planeFano plane

In finite geometry, the Fano plane is the projective plane with the least number of points and lines: 7 each....
. It has only seven points and seven lines. (See also finite geometryFinite geometry

A finite geometry is any geometric system that has only a finite number of points....
.) In the figure at right,
the seven points are shown as small black balls, and the seven lines are shown as six line segments and a circle. However, one could equivalently consider the balls to be the "lines" and the line segments and circle to be the "points" — this is an example of the dualityDuality (projective geometry)

In the geometry of projective spaces, including the projective plane, duality concerns the interchangeability between points...
 of projective planes: if the lines and points are interchanged, the result is still a projective plane. A permutation of the seven points that carries collinearIncidence (geometry) Summary

In geometry, the relations of incidence are those such as 'lies on' between points and lines, and 'intersects'....
 points (points on the same line) to collinear points is called a "symmetrySymmetry

Symmetry is a characteristic feature of geometrical shapes, systems, equations, and other real or conceptual objects —t...
" of the plane.

Properties


It can be shown that a projective plane has the same number of lines as
it has points.
This number can be infinite (as for the real projective plane)
or finite (as for the Fano plane).
A finite projective plane has

n2 + n + 1 points,


where n is an integerInteger

The integers consist of the positive natural numbers , their negatives and the number zero....
 called the order of the projective plane.
(The Fano plane therefore has order 2.)
There exists a finite projective plane of order n, if n is a prime powerPrime power

In mathematics, a prime power is a positive integer power of a prime number....
, and for all known finite projective planes, the order n is a prime power.
The existence of finite projective planes of other orders is an open question. The only general restriction known on the order is the Bruck-Ryser-Chowla theorem that if the order n is congruent to 1 or 2 mod 4, it must be the sum of two squares. This rules out n = 6. The next case n = 10 has been ruled out by massive computer calculations, and there is nothing more known, in particular n = 12 is still open. There is a projective plane of order n if and only if there is an affine plane of order n. When there is only one affine plane of order n there is only one projective plane of order n, but the converse is not true.
A projective plane of order n has n + 1 points on every line,
and n + 1 lines passing through every point,
and is therefore a Steiner S(2, n + 1, n2 + n + 1) system
(see Steiner systemSteiner system

In mathematics, a Steiner system is a type of block design....
). Conversely, one can prove that all Steiner systems of this form (n ≥ 2) are projective planes.

Linear algebra definition


One can construct projective planes (or higher dimensional projective spaceProjective space Overview

In mathematics, a projective space is a fundamental construction, obtained from a vector space over an arbitrary division ri...
s) by linear algebra over any division ring—not necessarily commutative. See for example quaternionic projective spaceQuaternionic projective space

In mathematics, quaternionic projective space is an extension of the ideas of real projective space and complex projective s...
. If we use a finite fieldFinite field Summary

In abstract algebra, a finite field or Galois field is a field that contains only finitely many elements....
 with pn elements we get a finite projective plane with order pn. The Fano planeFano plane

In finite geometry, the Fano plane is the projective plane with the least number of points and lines: 7 each....
 is then the plane over the field with two elements, Z2.

The plane over the octonions turns out to be an interesting real manifold, which can be used for geometric constructions and understanding of the exceptional Lie groupsSimple Lie group

In mathematics, a simple Lie group is a Lie group which is...
.

Generalized coordinates


One can construct a coordinate "ring"—a so-called planar ternary ringPlanar ternary ring

In mathematics, a planar ternary ring or ternary field is an algebraic structure , where is a non-empty set, and is ...
 (not a genuine ring) corresponding to any projective plane in the combinatorial definition. Algebraic properties of this "ring" turn out to correspond to geometric incidence properties of the plane. For example, Desargues' theoremDesargues' theorem

In projective geometry, Desargues' theorem, named in honor of Grard Desargues, states:...
 corresponds to the coordinate ring's being obtained from a division ringDivision ring

In abstract algebra, a division ring, also called a skew field, is a ring with 0 ≠ 1 and such that every non-zero e...
, while Pappus's theoremPappus's hexagon theorem

Pappus's hexagon theorem states that given one set of collinear points A, B, C, and another set of collinear poi...
 corresponds to this ring's being obtained from a commutative field. However, the "ring" need not be of these types, and there are many non-Desarguesian projective planes. AlternativeFacts About Alternative algebra

In abstract algebra, an algebra is called alternative if y = x and y = x for all x and y in the alge...
, not necessarily associative, division rings like the octonions correspond to MoufangRuth Moufang

Ruth Moufang was a German mathematician....
 planes. In the case of finite projective planes, the only proof known of the purely geometric statement that Desargues' theorem then implies Pappus' theorem (the converse being always true and provable geometrically) is through this algebraic route, using Wedderburn's theorem that finite division rings must be commutative.

Higher dimensions


It is possible to make analogous incidence definitions for higher dimensional projective geometries, with dimension larger than 2. These turn out to not be as interesting as (or one might say, they are better behaved than in) the planar case, as they are to the classical projective spaces over division ringDivision ring

In abstract algebra, a division ring, also called a skew field, is a ring with 0 ≠ 1 and such that every non-zero e...
s. The reason is that with the extra room to work in, one can prove Desargues' theorem geometrically as in its articleDesargues' theorem

In projective geometry, Desargues' theorem, named in honor of Grard Desargues, states:...
 by using incidence properties in this higher dimensional space; thus the coordinate "ring" must be a division ringDivision ring

In abstract algebra, a division ring, also called a skew field, is a ring with 0 ≠ 1 and such that every non-zero e...
.

Degenerate planes


Degenerate planes do not fulfill the third condition above. There are two families of degenerate planes.

1) For any number of points P1, ..., Pn, and lines L1, ..., Lm,

L1 =
L2 =
L3 =
...
Lm =


2) For any number of points P1, ..., Pn, and lines L1, ..., Ln, (same number of points as lines)

L1 =
L2 =
L3 =
...
Ln =

Connection with Latin squares

A projective plane of order n (n ≥ 2) exists if and only if there is an affine plane of this order. The number of mutually orthogonal latin squares of order n is at most n − 1. It turns out n − 1 is possible if and only if there is an affine plane of this order.

Construction of projective planes of prime order


Method 1

This is the standard construction using homogeneous coordinatesHomogeneous coordinates

In mathematics, homogeneous coordinates, introduced by August Ferdinand Mbius, allow affine transformations to be easily rep...
 over a finite fieldFinite field

In abstract algebra, a finite field or Galois field is a field that contains only finitely many elements....
.

Method 2

To construct a projective plane of order N (N prime), proceed as follows:

Create one point P
Create N points, which we will label P(c) : c = 0, ..., (N − 1)
Create N2 points, which we will label P(r, c) : r, c = 0, ..., (N − 1)


On these points, construct the following lines:

One line L =
N lines L(c) = : c = 0, ..., (N − 1)
N2 lines L(r, c): P(c) and the points P((r + ci) mod N, i), where i = 0, .., N − 1 : r, c = 0, ..., (N − 1)


Note that the expression

mod N

will pass once through each value as i varies from 0 to N − 1, but only if is N is prime.

By this construction, we have two degenerate planes: one point incident with one line (for N = 0) and a triangle consisting of three points and three lines (for N = 1). Every plane constructed with prime N (N > 1) fulfills all three conditions above.

For example, for N=2:

One line L =
2 lines L(c) = : c = 0, 1
4 lines L(r, c): P(c) and the points P((r + ci) mod 2, i), where i = 0, 1 : r, c = 0, 1

Small orders


While the classification of all projective planes is far from done, here are some results for some orders :

  • 2 : all isomorphic with PG(2,2)
  • 3 : all isomorphic with PG(2,3)
  • 4 : all isomorphic with PG(2,4)
  • 5 : all isomorphic with PG(2,5)
  • 6 : impossible as order of a projective plane, proved by TarryGaston Tarry

    Gaston Tarry was a French mathematician....
     as Euler's thirty-six officers problemFacts About Thirty-six officers problem

    The thirty-six officers problem is a mathematical puzzle proposed by Leonhard Euler in 1779....
  • 7 : all isomorphic with PG(2,7)
  • 8 : all isomorphic with PG(2,8)
  • 9 : PG(2,9), and three more different (up to isomorphism) non-Desarguesian planes.
  • 10 : impossible as order of a projective plane, proved by heavy computer calculation.
  • 11 : at least PG(2,11), others are not known but possible.
  • 12 : it is conjectured to be impossible as an order of a projective plane, but this is not proven.

See also

  • Incidence structureIncidence structure

    In mathematics, particularly in combinatorics, an incidence structure is a triple...
  • Projective geometryProjective geometry

    Projective geometry is a non-metrical form of geometry that emerged in the early 19th century....
  • Real projective planeReal projective plane

    In mathematics, the real projective plane is the space of lines in R3 passing through the origin....