Inversive ring geometry

Inversive ring geometry

In mathematics, inversive ring geometry is the extension to the context of associative rings, of the concepts of projective line, homogeneous coordinates, projective transformations, and cross-ratio, concepts usually built upon rings that happen to be fields.

One begins with ordered pairs ("a", "b") in "A"×"A" where "A" is an (associative) ring with 1. Let "U" be the group of units of the ring. When there is "g" in "U" such that

:("ag", "bg") = ("u", "v"),

then we write

:("u", "v") ~ ("a", "b").

In other words, we identify orbits under the action of "U", and ~ is the corresponding equivalence relation.

Two elements of a ring are "relatively prime" if the ideal in "A" that they generate is the whole of "A". The projective line over A is the set of equivalence classes for ~ on pairs of relatively prime elements :

:"P"("A") = { "U"("a", "b") ∈ "A" × "A" / ~ : "A a" + "A b" = "A" }.

Examples with topological descriptions (≈ denotes homeomorphism):

*"A" = "C" complex plane : "P"("C") ≈ "S"2 = Riemann sphere
*"A" = "H" quaternion ring : "P"("H") ≈ "S"4 = One-point compactification
*"A" = "D" dual number plane : "P"("D") = "D" ∪ { "U"(1, "x n"): "x" ∈ "R"}, "nn" = 0
*"A" = "M" split-complex plane : "P"("M") ≈ hyperboloid of one sheet. This description appeared in Russian in 1969 (Yaglom), in German in 1973 (Benz), and English in 1979 (Shenitzer translates Yaglom).

Affine and projective groups

The affine group on "A" is generated by the mappings "x" → "x" + "c" and "x" → "x u", "u" ∈ "U".

The group of projectivities on "P"("A") extends the affine group by including reciprocation "x" → "x"−1 as follows:

Represent translations by "U"("x", 1)egin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \ c & 1 end{pmatrix} = "U"("x" + "c", 1).

Represent "rotations" by "U"("x", 1)egin{pmatrix} u & 0 \ 0 & 1 end{pmatrix} = "U"("x u", 1).

Include reciprocation with "U"("x", "y")egin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix} = "U"("y", "x").

Note that if "u" ∈ "U", then "U"(1, "u") = "U"("u"−1, 1) = "U"("u", 1)egin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix}.

Composition of mappings is represented by matrix multiplication where the matrices are of the 2 × 2 type exhibited with entries taken from the ring "A". Call the set of them "M"("A", 2) so the group of projectivities "G"("A") ⊂ "M"("A", 2).For instance, in "G"("A") one finds the projectivity

:egin{pmatrix}u & 0 \0 & 1 end{pmatrix}egin{pmatrix}0 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix}egin{pmatrix} u & 0 \ 0 & 1 end{pmatrix}egin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix} = egin{pmatrix} u & 0 \ 0 & u end{pmatrix}.

Its action is "U"("x", 1)egin{pmatrix} u & 0 \ 0 & u end{pmatrix} = "U"("xu", "u") = "U"("u"−1 "xu", 1).

Thus the inner automorphism "x" → "u"−1 "x u" of the group of units "U" ⊂ "A" arises as a projectivity on "P"("A") by an element of "G"("A"). For example, when "A" is the ring of quaternions then one obtains rotations of 3-space.In case "A" is the ring of biquaternions, the mappings include both the ordinary and hyperbolic rotations of the Lorentz group.

Cross-ratio theorems

Here we consider existence, uniqueness, matching triples, and invariance.Suppose "p", "q", "r" ∈ "A" with: "t" = ("r" – "p")−1 and "v" = ("t" + ("q" – "r")−1)−1.When these inverses "t" and "v" exist we say "p", "q", and "r" are separated sufficiently". Now look at

: egin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \ -r & 1 end{pmatrix} egin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix} egin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \ t & 1 end{pmatrix} egin{pmatrix} v & 0 \ 0 & 1 end{pmatrix}.

The first two factors put "r" at "U"(1, 0) = ∞ where it stays. The third factor moves "t", the image of "p" under the first two factors, to "U"(0, 1), or zero in the canonical embedding. Finally, the fourth factor has traced "q" through the first three factors and formation of the rotation with "v" places U("q", 1) at "U"(1, 1). Thus the composition displayed places the triple "p","q","r" at the triple 0,1,∞. Evidently it is the "unique" such projectivity considering the pivotal use of fixed points of generators to bring the triple to 0,1,∞.

If "s" and "t" are two sufficiently separated triples then they correspond to projectivities "g" and "h" respectively which map each of "s" and "t" to (0,1,∞). Thus the projectivity "h"−1 o "g" maps "s" to "t" .

Denote by ("x","p","q","r") the image of "x" under the projectivity determined by "p","q","r" as above. This function f("x") is the cross-ratio determined by "p,q,r" ∈ A. The uniqueness of this function implies that when a single projectivity g ∈ G(A) is used to form another triple g(p), g(q), g(r) from the first one, then the new cross-ratio function h must agree with f o g. Hence h o g−1 = f so that
("g"("x"), "g"("p"), "g"("q"), "g"("r") ) = ("x", "p", "q", "r").

Historical notes

August Ferdinand Möbius investigated the Möbius transformations between his book "Baricentric Calculus"(1827) and his 1855 paper "Theorie der Kreisverwandtschaft in rein geometrischer Darstellung". Karl Wilhelm Feuerbach and Julius Plucker are also credited with originating the use of homogeneous coordinates. Eduard Study in 1898, and Elie Cartan in 1908, wrote articles on hypercomplex numbers for German and French "Encyclopedias of Mathematics", respectively. These articles also suggested the functor "A" → "G"("A") developed above, but in their era one lacked the concepts of the category of rings and the benefits of the rigor in equivalence relations was not yet appreciated, so the attempts of Study and Cartan were premature. The ring of dual numbers "D" gave Josef Grunwald opportunity to exhibit "P"("D") in 1906. (Über duale Zahlen und ihre Anwendung in der Geometrie", Monatshefte fur Mathematik17,81-136.) In 1947 the construction was carried out on H by P.G. Gormley, "Stereographic projection and the linear fractional group of transformations of quaternions"(Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section A 51, 67-85). In 1968 I.M. Yaglom's "Complex Numbers in Geometry" appeared in English, translated from Russian, wherein he uses "P"("D") to describe line geometry in the Euclidean plane and "P"("M") to describe it for Lobachevski's plane. Yaglom's text "A Simple Non-Euclidean Geometry" appeared in English in 1979. There in pages 174 to 200 he develops "Minkowskian geometry" and describes "P"("M") as the "inversive Minkowski plane". The Russian original of Yaglom's text was published in 1969. Between the two editions, Walter Benz (1973) published "Vorlesungen über Geometrie der Algebren" which included the homogeneous coordinates taken from "M".


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Inversive geometry — Not to be confused with Inversive ring geometry. In geometry, inversive geometry is the study of those properties of figures that are preserved by a generalization of a type of transformation of the Euclidean plane, called inversion. These… …   Wikipedia

  • Projective geometry — is a non metrical form of geometry, notable for its principle of duality. Projective geometry grew out of the principles of perspective art established during the Renaissance period, and was first systematically developed by Desargues in the 17th …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (I) — NOTOC Ia IA automorphism ICER Icosagon Icosahedral 120 cell Icosahedral prism Icosahedral symmetry Icosahedron Icosian Calculus Icosian game Icosidodecadodecahedron Icosidodecahedron Icositetrachoric honeycomb Icositruncated dodecadodecahedron… …   Wikipedia

  • Split-quaternion — Coquaternion multiplication × 1 i j k 1 1 i j k i i −1 k −j j j −k +1 −i …   Wikipedia

  • Möbius transformation — Not to be confused with Möbius transform or Möbius function. In geometry, a Möbius transformation of the plane is a rational function of the form of one complex variable z; here the coefficients a, b, c, d are complex numbers satisfying ad − …   Wikipedia

  • Dual number — For dual grammatical number found in some languages, see Dual (grammatical number). In linear algebra, the dual numbers extend the real numbers by adjoining one new element ε with the property ε2 = 0 (ε is nilpotent). The collection of dual… …   Wikipedia

  • Cross-ratio — D is the harmonic conjugate of C with respect to A and B In geometry, the cross ratio, also called double ratio and anharmonic ratio, is a special number associated with an ordered quadruple of collinear points, particularly points on a… …   Wikipedia

  • Motor variable — A function of a motor variable is a function with arguments and values in the split complex number plane, much as functions of a complex variable involve ordinary complex numbers. The split complex numbers lie in the motor plane D, a term… …   Wikipedia

  • Projective line — In mathematics, a projective line is a one dimensional projective space. The projective line over a field K , denoted P1( K ), may be defined as the set of one dimensional subspaces of the two dimensional vector space K 2 (it does carry other… …   Wikipedia

  • Category of rings — In mathematics, the category of rings, denoted by Ring, is the category whose objects are rings (with identity) and whose morphisms are ring homomorphisms (preserving the identity). Like many categories in mathematics, the category of rings is… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”