axiomatic projective geometry


The Language and Axioms

The languagePlanetmathPlanetmath of axiomatic projective geometry is a first-order language consisting of two sorts: point and line, and one binary predicateMathworldPlanetmath I called “incidence” between points and lines. There are various ways to call I(p,L): point p is incidentMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath with line L, L is incident with p, p lies on L, p is on L, or L passes through p.

There are three axioms for projective geometry:

Axiom 1. For any two distinct points, there is exactly one line incident with the points.

If p,q are points, we write pq or qp for the line incident with p and q.

In order to state the next axiom, we define the concept of meet or intersectionMathworldPlanetmath: two lines meet or intersect if there is a point incident with both lines, and that they are parallelMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath if no such a point exists.

Axiom 2. (Veblen’s axiom) For any four pairwise distinct points p,q,r,s, if pq meets rs, then pr meets qs.

A set of points is said to be collinearMathworldPlanetmath if there is a line incident with each of the points. Axiom 2 can be equivalently stated as: if points x,q,s are not collinear, and if px is a point on xq, and rx is a point on xs, then pr meets qs.

Axiom 3. Each line is incident with at least three points.

Models

A model of projective geometry is called a projective space. It consists of a set 𝒫 of points, a set of lines, and a relationMathworldPlanetmath I𝒫× such that the three axioms above are satisfied. In other words, a projective space is an incidence structure satisfying the conditions stated by the axioms. Here, lines and blocks are synonymous. In addition, if two lines are incident with the identical set of points, this set must contain at least three points, and so by Axiom 1, the lines are identical. In other words, any projective space is a simple incidence structure, and therefore any line may be identified with the set of points on it, which we will do for the remainder of the entry.

, a single point with no lines, a single line with at least three points, are all projective spaces. A prototypical example of a projective space is PG(V), where V is a vector spaceMathworldPlanetmath over some division ring k. The points and lines of PG(V) are one- and two-dimensional subspacesMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath and of V, respectively, and incidence is set inclusion.

Axiom 3 is sometimes known as the non-degeneracy axiom. With it, one can show that any two lines are equipolent in a projective space, and with this, the order of a projective space may be defined: it is one less than the cardinality of a line in the space.

Without Axiom 3, we would end up with projective spaces such that some lines containing fewer than three points. These are either the degenerate cases where I is such that all three axioms are satisfied vacuously (for example, a point and a line with no incidence relation at all, etc..), or structuresMathworldPlanetmath that are disjoint unionMathworldPlanetmath of spaces (satisfying all three axioms) such that pairs of points from different spaces lie on a line consisting of exactly the pair of points.

Subspaces and Dimensions

What seems to be absent in the axioms of projective geometry is any mentioning of another fundamental notion: plane. In fact, a plane can be defined using points, lines, and the incidence relation: a plane is the smallest set P of points (in the projective space) such that there is a line P and a point pP not on , such that pqP for any q on . We may write P=p,, and say that P is determined by p and . It is not hard to see that any non-incident pair of a line and a point on P determine P. A plane in a projective space is also a model of a projective planeMathworldPlanetmath (but not all models of a projective plane are isomorphicPlanetmathPlanetmath!).

More generally, we may define a subspace of a projective space as a set X of points such that if p,qX, then pqX. Equivalently, a subspace of a projective space, viewed as an incidence structure, is an incidence substructure (with inherited incidence relation) that is also a projective space. Given a projective space, the empty setMathworldPlanetmath is a subspace, and so is any point (properly a one-point set), as well as any line, and any plane.

DimensionsMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath can also be defined on subspaces of a projective space, recursively: has dimension -1, a point has dimension 0, and if subspace V has dimension n, then any subspace containing V and any point not in V has dimension n+1. This process can go on, until the whole space itself is reached, in which case, we say the projective space is finite-dimensional. Or, it can go on indefinitely, in which case we say that the space is infinite-dimensional. But for an infinite dimensional projective space, what is its dimension, since there are different magnitudes of infinityMathworldPlanetmath. Veblen has shown the following:

any projective spaces of dimension n>2 (including infinite dimensional ones) is isomorphic to PG(V) for some vector space V.

Thus, we may instead define the dimension of a projective space to be dim(V)-1, where the space is isomorphic to PG(V). This definition extends the recursive one given earlier. This also shows that if a projective space is infinite dimensional, its dimension is the same as the dimension of the vector space that generates it. A more direct way of defining dimension is to use the concept of independent spanning set of a projective space, similarMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath to that found for vector spaces.

References

  • 1 A. Beutelspacher, U. Rosenbaum Projective Geometry, From Foundations to Applications, Cambridge University Press (2000)
  • 2 O. Veblen, J. W. Young Projective Geometry, Volumes I & II, Ginn & Co., Boston, MA (1916)
Title axiomatic projective geometry
Canonical name AxiomaticProjectiveGeometry
Date of creation 2013-03-22 19:14:19
Last modified on 2013-03-22 19:14:19
Owner CWoo (3771)
Last modified by CWoo (3771)
Numerical id 15
Author CWoo (3771)
Entry type Definition
Classification msc 05B35
Classification msc 06C10
Classification msc 51A05
Related topic ProjectiveGeometry
Related topic ProjectiveSpace
Related topic ProjectivePlane2
Defines Veblen’s axiom
Defines order