projective space
Projective space and homogeneous coordinates.
Let be a field. Projective space of dimension over
, typically denoted by , is the set of lines passing
through the origin in . More formally, consider the
equivalence relation
on the set of non-zero points
defined by
Projective space is defined to be the set of the
corresponding equivalence classes.
Every determines an element of
projective space, namely the line passing through . Formally,
this line is the equivalence class , or ,
as it is commonly denoted. The numbers are referred
to as homogeneous coordinates of the line. Homogeneous coordinates
differ from ordinary coordinate systems in that a given element of
projective space is labeled by multiple homogeneous
“coordinates
”.
Affine coordinates.
Projective space also admits a more
conventional type of coordinate system, called affine coordinates.
Let be the subset of all elements
such that . We then
define the functions
according to
where is any element of the equivalence class representing . This definition makes sense because other elements of the same equivalence class have the form
for some non-zero , and hence
The functions are called affine coordinates relative
to the hyperplane
Geometrically,
affine coordinates can be described by saying that the elements of
are lines in that are not parallel to , and
that every such line intersects in one and exactly one point.
Conversely points of are represented by tuples
with , and each such
point uniquely labels a line in .
It must be noted that a single system of affine coordinates does not cover all of projective space. However, it is possible to define a system of affine coordinates relative to every hyperplane in that does not contain the origin. In particular, we get different systems of affine coordinates corresponding to the hyperplanes Every element of projective space is covered by at least one of these systems of coordinates.
Projective automorphisms.
A projective automorphism, also known as a projectivity, is a
bijective
transformation
of projective space that preserves all
incidence relations. For , every automorphism
of is
engendered by a semilinear invertible
transformation of .
Let be an invertible semilinear
transformation. The corresponding projectivity
is the transformation
For every non-zero the transformation gives the same projective automorphism as . For this reason, it is convenient we identify the group of projective automorphisms with the quotient
Here refers to the group of
invertible semi-linear transformations, while the quotienting
refers to the subgroup of scalar multiplications.
A collineation is a special kind of projective automorphism, one that
is engendered by a strictly linear transformation. The group of
projective collineations is therefore denoted by
Note that for fields such as and , the group of
projective collineations is also described by the projectivizations
, of the corresponding
unimodular group
.
Also note that if a field, such as , lacks non-trivial automorphisms, then all semi-linear transformations are linear. For such fields all projective automorphisms are collineations. Thus,
By contrast, since
possesses non-trivial automorphisms, complex conjugation for example,
the group of automorphisms of complex projective space is larger than
, where the latter denotes the quotient of
by the subgroup of scalings by the st roots
of unity.
Title | projective space |
---|---|
Canonical name | ProjectiveSpace |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 12:03:53 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 12:03:53 |
Owner | rmilson (146) |
Last modified by | rmilson (146) |
Numerical id | 13 |
Author | rmilson (146) |
Entry type | Definition |
Classification | msc 14-00 |
Related topic | Projectivity |
Related topic | SemilinearTransformation |
Defines | homogeneous coordinates |
Defines | affine coordinates |
Defines | projective automorphism |