Projective plane Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, a projective plane consists of a set of "lines" and a set of "points" with the following properties:- Given any two distinct points, there is exactly one line incident with both of them.
- Given any two distinct lines, there is exactly one point incident with both of them.
- There are four points such that no line is incident with more than two of them.
Note that 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 plane, which is a topological surface with surprising geometric properties; after that is the complex projective plane of algebraic geometry, a topological four-dimensional manifold.
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 integer called the order of the projective plane. (The Fano plane therefore has order 2.) For all known finite projective planes, the order is a prime power. The existence of finite projective planes of other orders is an open question. 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 system).
The definition of projective plane by incidence properties is something special to two dimensions: in general projective space is defined via linear algebra.
There are two families of degenerate planes.
1) For any number of points P1, ..., Pn, and lines L1, ..., Lm,
- L1 = { P1, P2, ..., Pn}
- L2 = {P1}
- L3 = {P1}
- ...
- Lm = {P1}
- L1 = {P1, P2, P3, ..., Pn}
- L2 = {P1, P2}
- L3 = {P1, P3}
- ...
- Ln = {P1, Pn}
- Create N2 points, which we will label P(r, c) : r, c = 0, ..., (N-1)
- Create N points, which we will label P(c) : c = 0..(N-1)
- Create one point P
- One line L = { P, P(0), ..., P(N-1)}
- N lines L(c) = {P, P(r, c}} : r, c = 0..(N-1)
- N2 lines L(r, i): { P(i), P((r + c*i) mod N, c) }
- (r + ci) mod N
By this construction, we have two planes
- L = {P}
- L={P, P(0)}, L(0)={P, P(0,0)}, L(0,0)={P(0), P(0,0)}
See also: projective geometry.
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