- Incidence structure
In combinatorial
mathematics , an incidence structure is a triple:C=(P,L,I).,
where "P" is a set of "points", "L" is a set of "lines" and I subseteq P imes L is the incidence relation. The elements of "I" are called flags. If
:p,ell) in I,
we say that point "p" "lies on" line ℓ.
Comparison with other structures
A figure may look like a graph, but in a graph an edge has just two ends (beyond a vertex a new edge starts), while a line in an incidence structure can be incident to more points.
An incidence structure has no concept of a point being in between two other points, the order of points on a line is undefined.
Dual structure
If we interchange the role of "points" and "lines" in
:C=(P,L,I),,!
the dual structure :C^*=(L,P,I^*),!
is obtained, where "I"* is the
inverse relation of "I". Clearly :C^{**}=C.,!A structure "C" that is
isomorphic to itsdual "C"* is called "self-dual".Correspondence with hypergraphs
Each
hypergraph orset system can be regarded as an incidencestructure in which theuniversal set plays the role of "points", the correspondingfamily of sets plays the role of "lines" and the incidence relation is set membership "∈". Conversely, every incidence structure can be viewed as a hypergraph.Example: Fano plane
In particular, let
:"P" = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7},
:"L" = 1,2,4},{2,3,5},{3,4,6},{4,5,7},{5,6,1},{6,7,2},{7,1,3
The corresponding incidence structure is called the
Fano plane .Geometric representation
Incidence structures can be modelled by points and curves in the
Euclidean plane with usual geometric incidence. Some incidence structures admit representation by points and lines. The Fano plane is not one of them since it needs at least one curve.Levi graph of an incidence structure
Each incidence structure C corresponds to a
bipartite graph calledLevi graph orincidence graph with a given black and white vertex coloring where black vertices correspond to points and white vertices correspond to lines of C and the edges correspond to flags.Example: Heawood graph
For instance, the Levi graph of the
Fano plane is theHeawood graph . Since the Heawood graph is connected andvertex-transitive , there exists an automorphism (such as the one defined by a reflection about the vertical axis in the above figure) interchanging black and white vertices. This, in turn, implies that theFano plane is self-dual.ee also
*
Binary relation
*Incidence matrix
*Incidence (geometry)
*Projective configuration
*Pappus configuration
*Hypergraph
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