Projective Geometry
Projective Geometry
Projective Geometry
Coxeter
Projective Geometry
Second Edition
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Springer-Verlag
H.S.M. Coxeter
Projective Geometry
SECOND EDITION
With 71 Illustrations
Springer-Verlag
New York Berlin Heidelberg
London Paris Tokyo
H.S.M. Coxctcr
Department of Mathematics
University of Toronto
Toronto M5S I A I
Canada
TO RIEN
AMS Classification: 51 A 05
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Coxeter. H. S.M. (Harold Scott Macdonald)
Projective geometry
Reprint, slightly revised, of 2nd ed originally
published by University of Toronto Press, 1974.
Includes index
Bibliography: p.
I. Geometry, Projective. I Title.
QA471.C67 1987
516.5
87-9750
The first edition of this book was publi~hed by Blaisdell Publishing Company. 1964: the second
edition was published by the University of Toronto Pre~s. 1974
1987 by Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
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In Euclidean geometry, constructions are made with the ruler and compass. Projective geometry is simpler: its constructions require only the ruler.
We consider the straight line joining two points, and the point of intersection
of two lines, with the further simplification that two lines never fail to
meet!
In Euclidean geometry we compare figures by measuring them. In projective
geometry we never measure anything; instead, we relate one set of points
to another by a projectivity. Chapter I introduces the reader to this important
idea. Chapter 2 provides a logical foundation for the subject. The third and
fourth chapters describe the famous theorems of Desargues and Pappus.
The fifth and sixth make use of projectivities on a line and in a plane, respectively. In the next three we develop a self-contained account of von
Staudt's approach to the theory of conics, made more "modern" by allowing
the field to be general (though not of characteristic 2) instead of real or
complex. This freedom has been exploited in Chapter 10, which deals with the
simplest finite geometry that is rich enough to illustrate all our theorems
nontrivially (for instance, Pascal's theorem concerns six points on a conic,
and in PG(2, 5) these are the only points on the conic). In Chapters 11 and 12
we return to more familiar ground, showing the connections between projective geometry, Euclidean geometry, and the popular subject of "analytic
geometry."
The possibility of writing an easy book on projective geometry was foreseen as long ago as 1917, when D. N. Lehmer [ll,* Preface, p. v] wrote:
The subject of synthetic projective geometry is ... destined shortly to force
its way down into the secondary schools.
More recently, A. N. Whitehead [22, p. 133] recommended a revised curriculum beginning with Congruence, Similarity, Trigonometry, Analytic
*References are given on page 158.
vi
Why should one study Pappian geometry? To this question, put by enthusiasts for ternary rings, I would reply that the classical projective plane is
an easy first step. The theory of conics is beautiful in itself and provides a
natural introduction to algebraic geometry.
Apart from the correction of many small errors, the changes made in this
revised edition are chiefly as follows. Veblen's notation Q(ABC, DEF) for
a quadrangular set of six points has been replaced by the "permutation
symbol" (AD) (BE) (CF), which indicates more immediately that there
is an involution interchanging the points on each pair of opposite sides of
the quadrangle. Although most of the work is in the projective plane, it has
seemed worth while (in Section 3.2) to show how the Desargues configuration can be derived as a section of the "complete 5-point" in space.
Section 4.4 emphasizes the analogy between the configurations of Desargues
and Pappus. At the end of Chapter 7 I have inserted a version of von Staudt's
proof that the Desargues configuration (unlike the general Pappus configuration) it not merely self-dual but self-polar. The new Exercise 5 on page
124 shows that there is a Desargues configuration whose ten points and
ten lines have coordinates involving only 0, 1, and -1. This scheme is of
special interest because, when these numbers are interpreted as residues
modulo 5 (so that the geometry is PG(2, 5), as in Chapter 10), the ten
pairs of perspective triangles are interchanged by harmonic homologies,
and therefore the whole configuration is invariant for a group of 5! projective
collineations, appearing as permutations of the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 used on
page 27. (The general Desargues configuration has the same 5! automorphisms, but these are usually not expressible as collineations. In fact,
the perspective collineation OPQR-+ OP'Q'R' considered on page 53 is
not, in general, of period two.*) Finally, there is a new Section 12.9 on page
This remark corrects a mistake in my Twelve Geometric Essays {Southern Illinois
University Press, 1968), p. 129.
viii
132, briefly indicating how the theory changes if the diagonal points of a
quadrangle are collinear.
I wish to express my gratitude to many readers of the first edition who
have suggested improvements; especially to John Rigby, who noticed some
very subtle points.
H. S. M. COXETER
Toronto, Canada
May, 1973
Contents
CHAPTER
1.1
6
8
10
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
CHAPTER
vii
1 Introduction
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
CHAPTER
Axioms
Simple consequences of the axioms
Perspective triangles
Quadrangular sets
Harmonic sets
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
28
CONTBNTS
41
43
45
47
Projective collineations
Perspective collineations
Involutory collineations
Projective correlations
49
52
55
57
7 Polarities
7.1
7.2
7.3
7.4
7.5
7.6
7.7
7.8
CHAPTER
Superposed ranges
Parabolic projectivities
Involutions
Hyperbolic involutions
6 Two-dimensional Projectivities
6.1
6.2
6.3
6.4
CHAPTER
33
35
36
38
5 One-dimensional Projectivities
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
CHAPTER
29
30
60
62
64
65
67
68
68
70
8 The Conic
71
75
CONTENTS
91
92
95
96
97
98
II Parallelism
CHAPTER
81
85
87
88
89
10.1
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
CHAPTER
76
78
80
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
CHAPTER
xi
bundle
How two planes determine an axial pencil
The language of pencils and bundles
The plane at infinity
Euclidean space
102
I03
I05
106
107
I08
I09
I2 Coordinates
I2.I
I2.2
I2.3
I2.4
Ill
112
116
119
xii
CONTENTS
12.5
12.6
12.7
12.8
12.9
Polarities
Conics
The analytic geometry of PG(2, 5)
Cartesian coordinates
Planes of characteristic two
122
124
126
129
132
Answers to Exercises
133
References
157
Index
159
CHAPTER
ONE
Introduction
The plane geometry of the first six books of Euclid's Elements may be
described as the geometry of Jines and circles: its tools are the straight-edge
(or unmarked ruler) and the compasses. A remarkable discovery was made
independently by the Danish geometer Georg Mohr (1640-1697) and the
Italian Lorenzo Mascheroni (1750-1800). They proved that nothing is lost
by discarding the straight-edge and using the compasses alone.* For instance,
given four points A, B, C, D, we can still construct the point where the lines
AB and CD would meet if we had the means to draw them; but the actual
procedure is quite complicated. It is natural to ask how much remains if we
discard the compass instead, and use the straight-edge alone.t At a glance,
it looks as if nothing at all will remain: we cannot even carry out the construction described in Euclid's first proposition. Is it possible to develop a geometry
See Reference 6, pp. 144-151, or Reference 8, p. 79.
t See Reference 16, pp. 41-43.
INTRODUCTION
PERSPECTIVE
INTRODUCTION
the community as full members having the same privileges as ordinary points.
This emancipation of the subject was carried out by another German,
K. G. C. von Staudt (1798-1867). The last vestiges of dependence on ordinary
geometry were removed in 1871, when Felix Klein provided an algebraic
foundation for projective geometry in terms of "homogeneous coordinates,"
which had been discovered independently by K. W. Feuerbach and A. F.
Mobius in 1827.
The determination of a point by two lines nicely balances the determination of a line by two points. More generally, we shall find that every statement about points and lines (in a plane) can be replaced by a dual statement
about lines and points. The possibility of making such a replacement is
known as the "principle of duality." Poncelet claimed this principle as his
own discovery; but its nature was more clearly understood by another Frenchman, J. D. Gergonne (1771-1859). Duality gives projective geometry a
peculiar charm, making it more symmetrical than ordinary (Euclidean)
geometry.
Besides being a thing of beauty in its own right, projective geometry is
useful as supplying a fresh approach to Euclidean geometry. This is especially
evident in the theory of conics, where a single projective theorem may yield
several Euclidean theorems by different choices of the line at infinity; e.g.,
if the line at infinity is a tangent or a secant, the conic is a parabola or a
hyperbola, respectively. Arthur Cayley (1821-1895) and Felix Klein (18491925) noticed that projective geometry is equally powerful in its application
to non-Euclidean geometries. With characteristic enthusiam, the former said:
Metrical geometry is a part of descriptive geometry, and descriptive geometry is all
geometry.
(Cayley, in 1859, used the word "descriptive" where today we would say
"projective.")
EXERCISES
I. Which of the following figures belong to projective geometry:
(i) a parallelogram,
(ii) an isosceles triangle,
(iii) a triangle and its medians,
(iv) a figure consisting of 4 points, no 3 collinear, and the lines joining
them in pairs,
(v) a circle with a diameter,
(vi) a conic with a secant (i.e., a line meeting it twice),
(vii) a plane curve with a tangent,
(viii) a hexagon (consisting of 6 points named in cyclic order, and the
6 lines that join consecutive pairs)?
VISH
2. How could a lampshade be tilted so that its circular rim would yield a
parabolic shadow on the wall?
3. Translate the following statements into the language of points at infinity:
(i) Through a given point there passes just one line parallel to a given line.
(ii) If two lines are parallel to a third line, they are parallel to each other.
1.3 Definitions
It is convenient to regard a line as a certain set of points, and a plane as a
certain set of points and lines. A point and a line, or a point and a plane,
or a line and a plane, are said to be incident if the former belongs to the latter.
We also say that the former lies on (or in) the latter, and that the latter passes
through the former. We shall consistently use capital italic letters for points,
small (lower case) italic letters for lines, and Greek letters for planes. If a line I
passes through two points P and Q, we say that it joins them and write
I= PQ. Similarly, if a plane ot passes through two lines I and m, or through I
and a nonincident point P, we say that ot joins the two lines, or the line and
point, and write
ot = lm = ml = IP = Pl.
If P lies on both I and m, we say that these lines meet in P, or that P is their
common point (or "intersection"):
P= lm.
(Notice the special use of the dot: lm is a plane, but/ m is a point.) Similarly,
a line and a plane may have a common point / ot, and two planes may have a
common line ot {J.
J. L. Synge (Reference 18, p. 32) has described an amusing and instructive
game called Vish (short for "vicious circle"):
The Concise Oxford Dictionary devotes over a column to the word "point" ...
"that which has position but not magnitude." This definition passes the buck, as
all definitions do. You now have to find out what "position" and "magnitude" are.
This means further consultation of the Dictionary, and we may as well make the
best of it by turning it into a game of Vish. So here goes.
Point = that which has position but not magnitude.
Position = place occupied by a thing.
Place
part of space ....
Space
continuous extension ....
Extension = extent.
Extent
space over which a thing extends.
continuous extension ....
Space
INTRODUCTION
The word Space is repeated. We have Vish In Seven .... Well, what about it?
Didn't we see and prove that a vicious circle is inevitable, so why be surprised that
we get one here? If that is your reaction, I shout with joy ....
Vish illustrates the important principle that any definition of a word must
inevitably involve other words, which require further definitions. The only
way to avoid a vicious circle is to regard certain primitive concepts as being so
simple and obvious that we agree to leave them undefined. Similarly, the proof
of any statement uses other statements; and since we must begin somewhere,
we agree to leave a few simple statements unproved. These primitive statements are called axioms.
In addition to the primitive concepts and axioms, we take for granted the
words of ordinary speech, the ideas of logical argument, and the principle of
one-to-one correspondence. The last is well illustrated by the example of cups
and saucers. Suppose we had about a hundred cups and about a hundred
saucers and wished to know whether the number of cups was actually equal
to the number of saucers. This could be done, without counting, by the simple
device of putting each cup on a saucer, that is, by establishing a one-to-one
correspondence between the cups and saucers.
EXERCISES
I. Play Vish beginning with the words:
(i) Axiom,
(ii) Dimension,
(iii) Fraction.
2. Set up a one-to-one correspondence between the sequence of natural
numbers I, 2, 3, 4, ... and the sequence of even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, ....
Are we justified in saying that there are just as many even integers as there
are integers altogether?
QS,
RS,
QR,
RP,
PQ,
B,
c.
a,
b,
c.
FIGURE 1.4A
INTRODUCTION
1.5 Projectivities
It is sometimes convenient to use the name range for the set of all points on
a line, and pencil for the set of all lines that lie in a plane and pass through a
point. Ranges and pencils are instances of one-dimensional forms. We shall
often have occasion to consider a one-to-one correspondence between two
one-dimensional forms. The simplest such correspondence between a range
and a pencil arises when corresponding members are incident. In this case it is
naturally understood that the line o on which the points of the range lie is not
incident with the point 0 through which the lines of the pencil pass. Thus
the range is a section of the pencil (namely, the section by the line o) and the
pencil projects the range (from the point 0). As a notation for this elementary
correspondence we may write either
Xi\ x,
where Xis a variable point of the range and xis the corresponding line of the
pencil (as in Figure l.SA), or
ABC i\ abc ,
where A, B, C, ... are particular positions of X and a, b, c, .. . are the corresponding positions of x (as in Figure l.So).
In such a relation, the order in which the symbols for the points or lines
are written does not necessarily agree with the order in which the points or
lines occur in the range or pencil. (In fact, the latter "order" is not defined!)
Corresponding symbols are placed in corresponding positions, but the
statement ABC A abc ,has the same meaning as BAC A hac ,
and so forth.
PROJECTIVITIES
Since the statement X A x means that X and x are incident, we can just as
well write
X A
X;
FIGURE 1.5A
FIGURE 1.5B
A more sophisticated kind of transformation can be constructed by combining any number of elementary correspondences. For this purpose, we use a
sequence of lines and points occurring alternately:
O, 0, 01, 01,
02, ,
On-1 On, On
We allow the sequence to begin with a point (by omitting o) or to end with a
line (by omitting On, as in Figure 1.5c), but we insist that adjacent members
-------"1
o,..
X"
X<>
FIGURE 1.5C
we write simply
or
A x<n>,
X A x<n>
or
A X<n>,
or
X A x<n>.
10
INTRODUCTION
X 1\ X'
or
XI\ X'.
x 1\ x'
or
.!.,
7\ X.
ABC 1\ A'B'C',
b .!_ 'b' c,
ac-,::;a
I
PERSPECTIVITIES
11
FIGURE
1.6A
in the manner of Figure 1.6o, where the axis (or "intermediary line") of the
projectivity joins the points
B' = AB" BA",
C'
AC" CA",
A.
(1.61)
For each point X on AB, we can construct a corresponding point X" on A" B"
by joining A to the point X'= A" X B'C', so that
A..
(1.62)
A.
We shall see, in Chapter 4, that this projectivity ABC 7i A" B"C" is unique,
in the sense that any sequence of perspectivities relating ABC to A" B"C: will
have the same effect on X.
FIGURE
1.6&
FIGURE
1.6c
12
INTRODUCTION
FIGURE 1.6D
Hence
ABCD 7i. BADC.
Expressing this result in words, we have the following theorem:
1.63 Any four collinear points can be interchanged in pairs by a projectivity.
As a third instance, we have, in Figure I .6E,
R
FIGURE 1.6E
PERSPECTIVITIES
13
EXERCISES
I. Given three collinear points A, B, C, set up two perspectivities whose
product has the effect ABC A BAC.
CHAPTER
TWO
2.1 Axioms
As we saw in Section 1.3, the complete development of any branch of
mathematics must begin with some undefined entities (primitive concepts)
and unproved propositions (axioms). The precise choice is a matter of taste.
It is, of course, essential that the axioms be consistent (not contradicting one
another) and it is desirable that they be independent, simple, and plausible.
Such foundations for projective geometry were first proposed by two Italians:
Gino Fano (in 1892) and Mario Pieri (in 1899). The following eight axioms,
involving three primitive concepts (point, line, and incidence) differ only
slightly from those proposed by Veblen and Young (Reference 19. pp. 16,
18, 24, 45). (We have already seen how the words plane, quadrangle, and
projectivity can be defined in terms of the primitive concepts.)
14
1S
AxiOM
2.11
AxiOM
AXIOM
2.13
Any two distinct points are incident with just one line.
AXIOM
AXIOM
2.15 If ABC is a plane, there is at least one point not in the plane
ABC.
AXIOM
2.16
AxiOM
FIGURE
2.1A
The best possible advice to the reader is to set aside all his previously
acquired knowledge (such as trigonometry and analytic geometry) and use
only the axioms and their consequences. He may occasionally be tempted to
use the old methods to work out one of the exercises; but then he is likely to
be so engulfed in ugly calculations that he will return to the synthetic method
with renewed enthusiasm.
EXERCISES
I. Give detailed proofs of the following theorems, pointing out which axioms
are used:
(i) There exist at least four distinct points.
(ii) If a is a line, there exists a point not lying on a.
(iii) If A is a point, there exists a line not passing through A.
(iv) Every point lies on at least three lines.
2. Construct a projectivity having exactly two invariant points. [Hint: Use
Exercise 3 of Section 1.5.]
16
3. Draw an equilateral triangle ABC with its incircle DEF, medians AD, BE,
CF, and center G. Notice that the figure involves 7 points, 6 lines, and 1
circle. Consider a "geometry," consisting entirely of 7 points and 7 lines,
derived from the figure by calling the circle a line (and ignoring the extra
intersections). Which one of the "two-dimensional" axioms (Axioms 2.11,
2.12, 2.13, 2.14, 2.17, 2.18) is denied? [Hint: Where are the diagonal points
of the quadrangles ABCG, AEFG, BCEF?]
17
2.21 Any two distinct lines have at most one common point.
PROOF. Suppose, if possible, that two given lines have two common
points A and B. Axiom 2.13 tells us that each line is determined by these
two points. Thus the two lines coincide, contradicting our assumption that
they are distinct.
2.22 Any two coplanar lines have at least one common point.
PROOF. Let E be a point coplanar with the two lines but not on either
of them. Let A C be one of the lines. Since the plane ACE is determined by
the pencil of lines through E that meet AC, the other one of the two given
lines may be taken to join two points on distinct lines of this pencil, say B
on EA, and D on EC, as in Figure 2.1 A. According to Axiom 2.14, the two
lines AC and BD have a common point.
2.23 If two lines have a common point, they are coplanar.
PROOF. If two lines have a common point C, we may name them AC,
BC, and conclude that they lie in the plane ABC.
2.24 There exist four coplanar points of which no three are collinear.
PROOF. By our first three axioms, there exist two distinct lines having
a common point and each containing at least two other points, say lines
EA and EC containing also B and D, respectively, as in Figure 2.1A. The
four distinct points A, B, C, D have the desired property of noncollinearity.
For instance, if the three points A, B, C were collinear, (on AB) would be
collinear with all of them, and EA would be the same line as EC, contradicting our assumption that these two lines are distinct.
Without Theorem 2.24, Axiom 2.17 might be "vacuous": it merely says
that, if a complete quadrangle exists, its three diagonal points are not
collinear.
Notice the remarkably compact foundation which is now seen to suffice
for the erection of the whole system of projective geometry.
EXERCISES
18
FIGURE 2.3A
corresponding lines meet in collinear points. For instance, the two triangles
PQR and P' Q' R' in Figure 2.3A are perspective since corresponding vertices
are joined by the three concurrent lines PP', QQ', RR', or since corresponding sides meet in the three collinear points
D
= QR Q'R',
E= RP R'P',
F= PQ P'Q'.
When Theorems 2.31 and 2.32 have been stated and proved, we shall see
that either kind o( correspondence implies the other. Meanwhile, let us say
tentatively that two figures are perspective from a point 0 if pairs of corresponding points are joined by lines through 0, and that two figures are
perspective from a line o if pairs of corresponding lines meet on o. (It is sometimes convenient to call 0 the center, and o the axis. Whenever we speak of
perspective figures we assume that the points, and also the lines, are all
distinct; for example, in the case of a pair of triangles, we assume that there
are six distinct vertices and six distinct sides.) The desired identification will
follow for all more complicated figures as soon as we have established it for
triangles. Accordingly, we begin with the following theorem:
DESARGUES
19
2.31 ff tii'O triangles are perspectite from a line they are perspectit.:e from
a point.
PROOF. Let two triangles, PQR and P'Q'R', be perspective from a line
o. In other words. let o contain three points D, , F, such that D lies on
both QR and Q'R, Eon both RP and R'P', F on both PQ and P'Q'. We
wish to prove that the three lines PP', QQ', RR' all pass through one point
0, as in Figure 2.3A. We distinguish two cases, according as the given
triangles are in distinct planes or both in one plane.
(I) According to Axiom 2.14, since QR meets Q' R', QQ' meets RR'.
Similarly RR' meets PP', and PP' meets QQ'. Thus the three lines PP', QQ',
RR' all meet one another. If the planes PQR and P'Q'R' are distinct, the
three lines must be concurrent; for otherwise they would form a triangle,
and this triangle would lie in both planes.
(2) If PQR and P'Q'R' are in one plane, draw, in another plane through
o, three nonconcurrent lines through D, , F, respectively, so as to form a
triangle P 1 Q1 R 1, with Q1 R 1 through D, R 1 PI through, and PIQ 1 through
F. This triangle is perspective from o with both PQ R and P' Q' R'. By the
result for noncoplanar triangles, the three lines PP1 , QQ 1, RR 1 all pass
through one pointS, and the three lines P' P1 , Q' QI, R' R1 all pass through
another pointS'. (The points SandS' are distinct; for otherwise PI would
lie on PP' instead of being outside the original plane.) Since PI lies on both
PS and P' S', Axiom 2.14 tells us that SS' meets PP'. Similarly SS' meets
both QQ' and RR'. Hence, finally, the three lines PP', QQ', RR' all pass
through the point
0 = PQR SS'.
The converse is
2.32 DESARGUES's THEOREM. If tii'O triangles are perspective from a
point they are perspectire from a line.
PROOF. Let two triangles, PQR and P' Q' R' (coplanar or noncoplanar)
be perspective from a point 0. We see from Axiom 2.14 that their three
pairs of corresponding sides meet, say in D, , F. It remains to be proved
that these three points are collinear, as in Figure 2.3A. Consider the two
triangles PP' E and QQ' D. Since pairs of corresponding sides meet in the
three collinear points R', R, 0, these triangles are perspective from a line,
and therefore (by 2.31 ), perspective from a point, namely, from the point
PQ P' Q' = F. That is, the three points , D, Fare collinear.
Theorem 2.31, the converse of Desargues's theorem, happens to be
easier to prove ab initio than Desargues's theorem itself. If, instead, we
had proved 2.32 first (as in Reference 7, p. 8), we could have deduced
the converse by applying 2.32 to the triangles PP'E and QQ'D.
20
EXERCISES
1. Verify experimentally the correctness of Desargues's theorem and its
converse for perspective triangles of various shapes in various relative
positions. If P, Q, R, P' and Q' are given, how much freedom do we have
in choosing the position of R'?
2. If three triangles are all perspective from the same center, then* the three
axes are concurrent. [Hint: Let the three axes be D 1E 1, D 2 E 2 , D 3E 3 Apply
2.31 to the triangles D1 D2 D3 and 1 2 3 .]
3. What happens to Theorem 2.31 if we allow corresponding sides of the two
triangles to be parallel, and admit points at infinity?
FIGURE 2.4A
to denote the statement that the six points A, B, C, D, E, F, form a quadrangular set in the manner of Figure 2.4A (that is, lying on the respective sides
PS, QS, RS, QR, RP, PQ of the quadrangle), so that the first three points lie
on sides through one vertex while the remaining three lie on the respectively
opposite sides, which form a triangle. This statement is evidently unchanged if
Whenever an eltercise is phrased as a statement, we understand that it is a theorem to
be proved. The omission of the words "prove that" or "show that" saves space.
QUADRANGULAR SETS
21
we apply any permutation to ABC and the same permutation to DEF; for
instance, (AD) (BE) (CF) has the same meaning as (BE) (AD) (CF),
since the quadrangle PQRS can equally well be called QPRS. Similarly, the
statement (AD) (BE) (CF) is equivalent to each of
(AD)(EB)(FC),
(DA)(BE)(FC),
(DA)(EB)(CF).
perspective from a point; thus the line PP' passes through the point
0 = RR' SS'. Similarly, the perspective triangles QRS and Q'R'S' show
that QQ' passes through this same point 0. (In other words, PQRS and
P' Q' R' S' are perspective quadrangles.) By Theorem 2.32, the triangles
PQR and P'Q'R', which are perspective from the point 0, are also perspective from the line DE, which is g; that is, the sides PQ and P' Q' both
meet g in the same point F.
FIGURE 2.48
22
EXERCISES
I. A necessary and sufficient condition for three lines containing the vertices
of a triangle to be concurrent is that their sections A, B, C by a line g form,
with the sections D, E, F of the sides of the triangle, a quadrangular set.
2. If, on a given transversal line, two quadrangles determine the same
quadrangular set (in the manner of Figure 2.4B), their diagonal triangles
are perspective.
FIGURE 2.5A
which evidently has the same meaning as H(BA, CF) or H(AB, FC) or
H(BA, FC), namely that A and B are two of the three diagonal points of a
quadrangle while C and F lie, respectively, on the sides that pass through the
third diagonal point. We call F the harmonic conjugate of C with respect to A
and B. Of course also Cis the harmonic conjugate of F. From Theorem 2.41
we see that F is uniquely determined by A, B, C. (We shall prove in Theorem
3.35 that the relation H(AB, CF) implies H(CF, AB).) For a simple construction, draw a triangle QRS whose sides QR, QS, RS pass through A, B, C (as
in Figure 2.5A); then P =AS BRand F = AB PQ.
Axiom 2.17 implies that these harmonic conjugates C and Fare distinct,
except in the degenerate case when they coincide with A or B. In other words,
HARMONIC SETS
23
2.51 If A, B, C t.re all distinct, the relation H(AB, CF) implies that F is
distinct from C.
It follows that there must be at least four points on every line; how many
more is not specified. We shall examine this question in Section 3.5.
EXERCISES
I. Assigning the symbol G to PQ RS, name two other harmonic sets in
Figure 2.5A.
2. How should the points P, Q, R, Sin Figure 2.5A be renamed if the names
of C and F were interchanged?
3. Derive a harmonic set from a quadrangle consisting of a triangle PQR and
a point S inside.
4. What is the harmonic set determined by a quadrangle PQRS if Axiom 2.17
is denied and the diagonal points are collinear?
5. Suppose, for a moment, that the projective plane is regarded as an extension of the Euclidean plane (as in Section 1.2). Referring to Figure 2.5A,
suppose PQ is parallel to AB, so that F is at infinity. What metric result
can you deduce about the location of C with reference to A and B?
CHAPTER THREE
3.1%
25
(These are derived from 2.22 and 2.24 by omitting the word "coplanar,"
which is now superfluous.) We shall develop such a theory out of the following six propositions:
2.13, 3.11, 3.12, 2.17, 2.32, 2.18,
which will thus be seen to form a sufficient set of axioms for the projective
plane.
The two-dimensional principle of duality (i.e., the principle of duality in the
plane) asserts that every definition remains significant, and every theorem
remains true, when we interchange the words point and line (and consequently
also certain other pairs of words such as join and meet, collinear and concurrent, vertex and side, and so forth). For instance, the dual of the point AB CD
is the line (a b)(c d). (Since duality interchanges joining and meeting, it
requires not only the interchange of capital and small letters but also the
removal of any dots that are present and the insertion of dots where they are
absent.) The arrangement in Section 1.4 of definitions in "parallel columns"
shows at once that the dual of a quadrangle (with its three diagonal points)
is a quadrilateral (with its three diagonal lines). Still more simply, the dual of
a triangle (consisting of its vertices and sides) is again a triangle (consisting
of its sides and vertices); thus a triangle is an instance of a self-dual figure.
Axioms 2.13 and 3.11 clearly imply their duals. To prove the dual of
3.12, consider the sides PQ, QR, RS, SP of the quadrangle PQRS that is
given by 3.12 itself. Similarly, the duals of 2.17 and 2.18 present no difficulty. The dual of 2.32 is its converse, 2.31 (which can be proved by
applying 2.32 to the triangles PP'E and QQ'D in Figure 2.3A). Thus all the
26
if lines a and b are coplanar, the dual of ab is a b. However, for the sake of
brevity we shall assume, until the end of Chapter 9, that all the points and
lines considered are in one plane. (For a glimpse of the analogous three-dimensional developments, see Reference 8, p. 256.)
EXERCISES
1. Deduce 2.12 from 2.13, 3.11, and 3.12 (Reference 8, pp. 233, 446).
2. Let the diagonal points of a quadrangle PQRS be
A= PS QR,
QSRP,
RSPQ,
BC QR,
B1
CA RP,
A2
BCPS,
B2
CA QS,
=
C2 =
C1
ABPQ,
AB RS.
Then the triads of points A1B2 C2 , A2B1 C2 , A2B2 C1 , A1B1 C1 lie on lines, say
p, q, r, s, forming a quadrilateral pqrs whose three diagonal lines are the
sides
b = CA,
c = AB
a= BC,
of the triangle ABC. In other words, the quadrangle PQ RS and the quadrilateral pqrs have the same diagonal triangle. (Reference 19, pp. 45-46.)
The dual of (me, nd) is (nd, me). For instance, (43 , 62) is a quadrangle and (62 , 43)
is a quadrilateral.
In the case of a self-dual configuration, we have m = n, c = d, and the
symbol (nd, nd) is conveniently abbreviated to nd. For instance, 32 is a triangle.
We see from Figure 2.3A that 2.32 (Desargues's theorem) establishes the
existence of a self-dual configuration 103 : ten points and ten Hnes, with
three points on each line and three lines through each point. In fact, the ten
points
P,
Q,
R,
P',
Q',
R',
D,
E,
F,
27
DQ'R', ER'P', FP'Q', DQR, ERP, FPQ, OPP', OQQ', ORR', DEF.
Referring to the three-dimensional proof of 2.31 (in the middle of page 19),
we see that these ten points lie respectively on the ten joins of the five
"exterior" points Pt, Q1, Rt, S, S':
PtS,
QtS,
while the ten lines lie respectively in the ten planes through triads of these
same five points. Associating the five points P 1 , Q~oRt, S, S' with the digits
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, we thus obtain a symmetric notation in which the points and
lines of the Desargues configuration 108 are (in the above order) :
Gt4 G24, Ga4, Gtli G21i, GBii, G2a, G13, G12, G411,
gH, g24, ga4, glll g2r1, gall, g2a, gta, gu, g,ll
Whenever i < j, g,1 is the line containing three points whose subscripts involve neither i nor j, and G,1 is the common point of three such lines. In other
words, a point and line of the configuration are incident if and only if their
four subscripts are all different.
EXERCISES
1. Copy Figure 2.3A, marking the lines with the symbols g,1
2. Draw the five lines g12, g2a, ga,, g411, g111 in one color, and the five lines Bt
g24, g2G, gaG, g1a in another color, thus exhibiting the configuration as a
pair of simple pentagons, "mutually inscribed" in the sense that consecutive sides of each pass through alternate vertices of the other. (J. T.
Graves, Philosophical Magazine (3),15 (1839), p. 132.)
3. Beginning afresh, draw the four lines g111 g211, gall, g,ll in one color, and the
remaining six in another color, thus exhibiting the configuration as a
complete quadrilateral and a complete quadrangle, so situated that each
vertex of the former lies on a side of the latter.
4. Is it possible to draw a configuration 78 ? [Hint: Look at Axiom 2.17.]
28
FIGURE 3.3A
FIGURE 3.38
then
(a s)(b r),
f=
(a b)(p q).
In fact, the quadrilateral pqrs has a and b for two of its three diagonal lines
while c and f, respectively, pass through the vertices that would be joined by
the third diagonal line.
Figure 3.3B, which is obtained by identifying the lines
p, q, r, s, a, b, c
of Figure 3.3A with the lines
PQ, AB, QR, RP, PS, QS, RS
of Figure 2.5A, shows how the harmonic set of points ABCF arises as a section
of the harmonic set of lines abcf. Since such a figure can be derived from any
harmonic set of points and any point S outside their line,
3.31 A harmonic set ofpoints is projectedfrom any point outside the line by
a harmonic set of lines.
Dually,
3.32 Any section of a harmonic set of lines, by a line not passing through
the point of concurrence, is a harmonic set of points.
Combining these two dual statements, we deduce that
3.33 If ABCF 7\ A'B'C'F' and H(AB, CF), then H(A'B', C'F').
TRILINEAR POLARITY
3.34
If ABCF
29
EXERCISES
I. Let ABC be the diagonal triangle of a quadrangle PQRS. How can PQR
be reconstructed if only ABC and S are given? [Hint: QR is the harmonic
conjugate of AS with respect to AB and AC.]
H(BB~o
Since these two triangles are perspective from S, 2.32 tells us that D, E, F lie
on a line s. This line is what Poncelet called the trilinear polar of S.
Conversely, if we are given the triangle PQR and any lines, not through a
vertex, we can define A, B, C to be the harmonic conjugates of the points
D, E, Fin which s meets the sides QR, RP, PQ. By 2.31, the three lines PA,
QB, RC all pass through a point S, which is the trilinear pole of s.
30
EXERCISES
I. What happens if we stretch the definitions of trilinear pole and trilinear
polar to the forbidden positions of Sand s (namely Son a side, or s through
a vertex)?
2. Locate (in Figure 3.4A) the trilinear pole of s with respect to the triangle
ABC.
FIGURE 3.4A
3. How should all the lines in this figure be named so as to make it obviously
self-dual?
4. In the spirit of Section 2.5, Exercise 5, what metrical property of the triangle PQR arises when we seek the trilinear pole of the line at infinity?
HARMONIC NETS
31
R(ABC) = R(BCD).
By repeated applications of this result we see that, if K, L, M are any three
distinct points of R(ABC),
R(ABC)
R(BCK)
R(CKL)
R(KLM).
Hence
3.52 A harmonic net is equally well determined by any three distinct points
belonging to it.
We could, in fact, define a harmonic net to be a set, as small as possible,
of at least three collinear points which includes, with every three of its
members, the harmonic conjugate of each with respect to the other two.
If we begin to make a careful drawing of a harmonic net, we soon find that
this is an endless task: the harmonic net seems to include infinitely many
points between any two given points, thus raising the important question
whether it includes every point on the line. There is some advantage
in leaving this question open, that is, answering "Yes and No." Projective
geometry, as we are developing it here, is not categorical: it is really
not just one geometry but many geometries, depending on the nature
of the set of all points on a line. In rational geometry and the simplest
finite geometries, all the points on a line form a single harmonic net, so that
Axiom 2.18 becomes superfluous. In real geometry, on the other hand, the
points on a line are arranged like the continuum of real numbers, among
which the rational numbers represent a typical harmonic net (Reference 7,
p. 179). Between any two rational numbers, no matter how close, we can find
infinitely many other rational numbers and also infinitely many irrational
numbers. Analogously, between any two points of a harmonic net on the
real line we can find infinitely many other members of the net and also
infinitely many points not belonging to the harmonic net. Axiom 2.18 (or,
alternatively, some statement about continuity) is needed to ensure the
invariance of these extra points.
When the points of a line in rational geometry, or the points of a harmonic
32
FIGURE 3.5A
.net in real geometry, are represented by the rational numbers, the natural
numbers (that is, positive integers) represent a harmonic sequence ABCD . .. ,
which is derived from three collinear points A, B, M by the following special
procedure. With the help of two arbitrary points P and Q on another line
through M, as in Figure 3.5A, we construct in turn,
=
C=
A'
AP BQ,
B'
BP A' M,
B'Q AM,
C'= CPA'M,
D=C'QAM,
D'=DPA'M,
EXERCISES
1. Is the harmonic sequence ABC ... uniquely determined by its first three
members?
2. In the notation of Figure 3.5A, is A' B' C' ... a harmonic sequence?
3. What happens to the sequence ABCD ... (Figure 3.5A) when PQ is the
line at infinity, so that ABB' A', BCC'B', CDD'C', ... , are parallelograms?
CHAPTER
FOUR
The Golden Age of Greek geometry ended with the time of Apollonius of Perga.... The beginning of the Christian era sees quite a
different state of things. . . . Production was limited to elementary
textbooks of decidedly feeble quality. . . . The study of higher geometry languished or was completely in abeyance until Pappus arose
to revive interest in the subject.... The great task which he set
himself was the re-establishment of geometry on its former high
plane of achievement.
Sir Thomas Heath (1861-1940)
A'
34
A'
A1
FIGURE 4.1A
FIGURE 4.1B
4.12 THE FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM OF PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY: A projectivity is determined when three collinear points and the corresponding three
collinear points are given.
Of course, either of the sets of "three collinear points" (or both) can be
replaced by "three concurrent lines." Thus each of the relations
ABC 7i. A'B'C', ABC 7i. abc,
35
ABCD 7\ abed,
abed 7\ a'b'c'd'
expresses a special property of eight points, or of four points and four lines,
or of eight lines, of such a nature that any seven of the eight will uniquely
determine the remaining one. We now have the proper background for
Theorem 1.63, which tells us that, if a projectivity interchanges A and B while
transforming C into D, it also transforms D into C, that is, it interchanges
Cand D.
EXERCISES
I. Given three collinear points A, B, C, set up three perspectivities whose
product has the effect ABC 7\ BCA.
2. If the projectivity ABC 7\ BCA transforms D into E, and E into F, how
does it affect F? [Hint: Use Axiom 2.18.]
3. If A, B, C, D are distinct collinear points, then
ABCD 7\ BADC 7\ CDAB 7\ DCBA.
36
be two other points of the first range, A' and B' the corresponding points
of the second. The fundamental theorem tells us that the perspectivity
0
ABE 1\ A'B'E,
where 0
AA' BB', is the same as the given projectivity ABE 7i. A' B' E.
FIGURE 4.2A
EXERCISES
1. Any two harmonic nets, R(ABC) and R(A'B'C') (or any two harmonic
sequences, ABC ... and A'B'C' ... ) are related by a projectivity.
2. Let the side QR of a quadrangle PQRS meet the side BC of its diagonal
triangle ABC in A1 , as in Exercise 2 of Section 3.1. Regarding ABPCSA 1 as
a hexagon whose six vertices lie alternately on two lines, what can be said
about the intersections of pairs of "opposite" sides of this hexagon?
3. Dualize Theorem 4.22 and Figure 4.2A.
4. If H(AB, CD) then ABCD 7i. BACD. (Compare Section 4.1, Exercise 3.)
4.3 The Axis of a Projectivity
The fundamental theorem 4.12 tells us that there is only one projectivity
ABC 7i. A' B'C' relating three distinct points on one line to three distinct
points on the same or any other line. The construction indicated in 4.11
(see Figure 4.1A) shows how, when the lines AB and A'B' are distinct, this
unique projectivity can be expressed as the product of two perspectivities
whose centers may be any pair of corresponding points (in reversed order) of
the two related ranges. It is natural to ask whether different choices of the
37
two centers will yield different positions for the line MN of the intermediate
range. A negative answer is provided by the following theorem:
FIGURE 4.3A
FIGURE 4.38
Let E be the common point of the two lines. Suppose first that E is
invariant, as in Figures 4.2A and 4.3A. Referring to Figure 4.1 A, we observe
that, when X coincides with E, so also do Q and X'. The axis EN is independent of AA', since it can be described as the harmonic conjugate of EO
with respect to the given lines EB and EB'. On the other hand, if the common
point E is noninvariant, as in Figure 4.3B, it is still a point belonging to
both ranges. Referring to Figure 4.1A again, we observe that, when X
coincides with E, Q and X' both coincide with the corresponding point
E'. Hence the axis passes through E'. For a similar reason the axis also
passes through the point E0 of the first range for which the corresponding
point of the second is E. Hence the axis can be described as the join E 0 E'.
This completes the proof of 4.31. The final remark can be expressed as
follows:
4.32 If EoEE' is a triangle, the axis of the projectivity AEoE 7i. A'EE' is
the line EoE'.
38
EXERCISE
Pappus ud Deurgues
We are now ready to prove one of the oldest of all projective theorems.
Pappus of Alexandria, living in the fourth century A.D., used a laborious
development of Euclid's methods (see Reference 21, pp. 286-290, and Ia,
pp. 66-69).
4.41 PAPPus's THEOREM: If the six vertices of a hexagon lie alternately
on two lines, the three pairs of opposite sides meet in collinear points.
PRooF. Let the hexagon be AB'CA'BC', as Figure 4.4A (which
shows two of the many different ways in which it can be drawn). Since
alternate vertices are collinear, there is a projectivity ABC i\ A'B'C'. The
pairs of opposite sides, namely
B'C, BC';
C'A,CA';
A'B,AB',
BB', CC';
CC',AA';
AA',BB'.
L=B'C BC',
M=C'A CA',
N=A'B AB'
I=AB' CA',
we have
E=AB A'B',
K=AC' CB',
ANJ~KLC.
Thus M lies on NL; that is, L, M, N are collinear.
Similarly, since Theorem 4.22 is a consequence of the five axioms 2.13,
3.11, 3.12, 2.17, 2.18, we could have proved 2.32 (Desargues's theorem)
as follows.
39
FIGURE4.4A
Assuming that the lines PP', QQ', RR' all pass through 0, as in Figure
2.3A, we defineD= QR Q'R', E = RP R'P', F = PQ P'Q' and three
further points
A=OPDE,
Then
B=OQDE,
C=OR DE.
At= A, Bt
= B,
Aa = L, Ba = M, C 3 = N
40
= CM,
b2
= CL,
c2 = AB,
or
provide an instance of Graves triangles: a cycle of three triangles, each inscribed in the next. (See page 130 of Graves's paper mentioned in Exercise 2
of Section 3.2. This aspect of the Pappus configuration was rediscovered by
G. Hessenberg.)
EXERCISES
1. Using the "symmetrical" notation for the Pappus configuration, prepare
a table showing which are the three points on each line and which are the
three lines through each point. Observe that the three points A,, BJ> C, are
collinear (and the three lines ai, b;. ck are concurrent) whenever i + j + k
is a multiple of three. (Reference Ua, p. 108.)
2. Given a triangle A 1A 2A 3 and two points Bt. B 2, locate a point B 8 such that
the three lines AtBt, A2Bs, AsB2 are concurrent while also the three lines
AtBs, A2B2, AsBt are concurrent. Then also the three lines A1B2, A~t.
AaBs are concurrent; in other words, if two triangles are doubly perspective, they are triply perspective. (Reference 19, p. 100.)
3. What can be said about the three "diagonals" of the hexagon
AtBsA2B~aBt?
4. State the dual of Pappus's theorem and name the sides of the hexagon in
the notation of Exercise 1.
5. Consider your solution to Exercise 2 of Section 4.2. Could this be developed into a proof of Pappus's theorem?
6. If one triangle is inscribed in another, any point on a side of the former
can be used as a vertex of a third triangle which completes a cycle of
Graves triangles (each inscribed in the next).
7. Assign the digits 0, 1, ... , 8 to the nine points of the Pappus configuration
in such a way that 801, 234, 567 are three triads of collinear points while
012, 345, 678 is a cycle of Graves triangles. (E. S. Bainbridge. )
In his answer to an examination question.
CHAPTER FIVE
One-Dimensional Projectivities
42
ONE-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
5.11 The two statements AECF i\ BDCF and (AD) (BE) (CF) are
equivalent, not only when C and Fare distinct but also when they coincide.
FIGURE S.IA
FIGURE S.IB
This is remarkable because, when the quadrangular set is derived from the
quadrangle, the two triads ABC and DEF arise differently: the first from three
sides with a common vertex, and the second from three that form a triangle.
It is interesting that, whereas one way of matching two quadrangles (Figure
2.4B) uses only Desargues's theorem, the other (Exercise 2, below) needs the
fundamental theorem.
Our use of the words elliptic, parabolic and hyperbolic arises from the
aspect of the projective plane as a Euclidean plane with an extra line at infinity.
In this aspect a conic is an ellipse, a parabola, or a hyperbola according as its
number of points at infinity is 0, I, or 2, that is, according as it "goes oft' to
PARABOLIC PROJECTIVITIES
43
infinity" not at all, or in one direction (the direction of the axis of the
parabola) or in two directions (the directions of the asymptotes of the
hyperbola). The names of the conics themselves are due to Apollonius
(see Reference 13, p. 10).
EXERCISES
I. Using Figure 5.1A again (and defining V = PS QR), construct a hyperbolic projectivity having A and D as its invariant points.
2. Take any five collinear points A, B, C, D, E. Construct F so that
(AD) (BE) (CF). Then (on the other side of the line, for convenience)
construct C' so that (DA)(EB)(FC'). See how nearly your C' agrees
with C.
3. Two perspectivities cannot suffice for the construction of an elliptic
projectivity. In other words, if an elliptic projectivity exists, its construction
requires three perspectivities.
4. Does an elliptic projectivity exist?
S.:Z Parabolic Projectivities
The fundamental theorem, 4.12, shows that a hyperbolic projectivity is
determined when both its invariant points and one pair of distinct corresponding points are given. In fact, any four collinear points A, B, C, F
determine such a projectivity ACF 7i. BCF, with invariant points C and F.
To construct it, we take a triangle QPS whose sides PS, SQ, QP pass,
respectively, through A, B, F. If the side through F meets CS in U (as in
Figure 5.1A), we have
1'
44
ONE-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
projectivity would take A to some different point B, and the second would
take B back to A. Thus the first would be ACC 7i. BCC, the second would
be its inverse BCC 7i. ACC, and the product would not be properly
hyperbolic but merely the identity.
FIGURE
5.2A
Thus the product of ACC 7i. A'CC and A'CC 7i. A"CC is ACC 7i. A"CC,
and we can safely write out strings of parabolic relations such as
AECF
are equivalent. Setting B
7\
BDCF
and
E and C
H(BC, AD).
5.22
if
In other words, the parabolic projectivity ACC 7i. A'CC transforms A'
into the harmonic conjugate of A with respect to A' and C.
EXERCISE
What happens to the paraboJ.ic projectivity ACC 7i. A'CC (Figure 5.2A)
when PQ is the line at infinity (as in Exercise 3 of Section 3.5)?
INVOLUTIONS
4S
5.3 Involutions
Desargues's works were not well received during his lifetime. This lack of
appreciation was possibly a result of his obscure style; he introduced about
seventy new terms, of which only im:olution has survived. According to his
definition, formulated in terms of the nonprojective concept of distance and
the arithmetic concept of multiplication, an "involution" is the relation
between pairs of points on a line whose distances from a fixed point have a
constant product (positive or negative). He might well have added "or a constant sum." An equivalent definition, not using distances, was given by von
Staudt: All involution is a projectirity ofperiod two, that is, a projectivity which
interchanges pairs of points. It is remarkable that this relation
XX' A X'X
holds for all positions of X if it holds for any one position:
5.31
AA'X A A'AX',
46
ONE-DIMENSIONAL PllOJECTIVmES
which shows that there is a projectivity in which AECF 7i. DBFC. Since this
interchanges C and F, it is an involution, namely
(BE)(CF) or (CF)(AD)
or (AD)(BE).
Thus the quadrangular relation (AD) (BE) (CF) is equivalent to the statement that the projectivity ABC i\ DEF is an involution, or that
ABCDEF A DEFABC.
In other words,
5.33 The three pairs of opposite sides of a complete quadrangle meet any
line (not through a vertex) in three pairs of an involution. Conversely, any
three collinear points, along with their mates in an involution, form a quadrangular set.
It follows that the construction for F, when A, B, C, D, E are given (as in
the preamble to 2.41), may be regarded as a construction for the mate of C in
the involution (AD)(BE). (See Figure 2.4A or 5.1A.)
We have seen that CF is a pair of the involution (AD)(BE) if and only if
AECF A BDCF. We must get accustomed to using other letters in the same
context. For instance, MN is a pair of the involution (AB')(BA') if and only if
AA'MN A BB'MN. Since (AB')(BA') is the same as (AB')(A'B), it follows
that the two statements
AA'MN 7i. BB'MN and ABMN A A'B'MN
are equivalent. (Notice that it is only the statements that are equivalent: the
two projectivities are, of course, distinct.)
If two involutions, (AA')(BB') and (AA 1 )(BB1), have a common pair MN,
we deduce
Hence
5.34 If MN is a pair of each of the involutions (AA')(BB') and (AA 1 )(BB1 ),
it is also a pair of (A' B 1)(B' A 1).
All these results remain valid when M and N coincide, so that we are dealing
with parabolic (instead of hyperbolic) projectivities. Thus M is an invariant
point of the involution (AB')(BA') if and only if AA' MM A BB'MM, that is,
if and only if ABMM 7\ A' B' M M; and if M is an invariant point of each of
the involutions (AA')(BB') and (AA 1 )(BB1), it is also an invariant point of
(A' B 1)(B' A 1).
47
EXERCISES
I. Given six collinear points A, B, C, D, E, F, consider the three involutions
(AB)(DE), (BC)(EF), (CD)(FA). If any two of these involutions have a
Thus any involution that is not elliptic is hyperbolic: there are no "parabolic
involutions." Moreover, any two distinct points A and B are the invariant
48
ONEDIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
4. Given (AD) (BE) (CF), let A', B', C', D', E', F' be the harmonic conjugates of A, B, C, D, E, F with respect to two fixed points on the same line.
Then (A'D') (B'E') (C'F').
5. If ABCD 7\ ABDE and H(CE, DD'), then H(AB, DD'). (S. Schuster.)
6. Let X be a variable point collinear with three distinct points A, B, C, and
let Yand X' be defined by H(AB, XY), H(BC, YX'). Then the projectivity
X 7\ X' is parabolic. [Hint: When X is invariant, so that X' coincides
with it, Y too must coincide with it; for otherwise both A and C would be
the harmonic conjugate of B with respect to X and Y. Therefore X must
be either A orB, and also either B or C; that is, X= B.]
7. H H(BC,AD) and H(CA,BE) and H(AB,CF),then (AD)(BE)(CF).
[Hint: Apply 5.41 to the involution BCAD 7\ ACBE. Deduce H(DE, CF).]
CHAPTER
SIX
Two-Dimensional Projectivities
(Reference 3, p. 163)
SO
TWo-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVmES
A projective co/lineation is a collineation that transforms every one-dimensional form (range or pencil) projectively, so that, if it transforms the points Y
on a line b into the points Y' on the corresponding line b', the relation between
Y and Y' is a projectivity Y 7\ Y'. The following remarkable theorem is
reminiscent of 5.31 :
6.11
FIGURE 6.1A
PRooF. Let a and a' be the corresponding lines that carry the projectively related ranges. We wish to establish the same kind of relationship
between any other pair of corresponding lines, say b and b' (Figure 6.1A).
Let Y be a variable point on b, and 0 a fixed point on neither a nor b. Let
0 Y meet a in X. The given collineation transforms 0 into a fixed point 0'
(on neither a' nor b'), and 0 Y into a line 0' Y' that meets a' in X'. Since X
is on the special line a, we have X 7\ X'.'Thus
Y 7\ X 7\ X' 1\ Y':
PROJECTIVE COLUNEATIONS
Sl
6.13 Given any two complete quadrilaterals (or quadrangles), with their
four sides (or vertices) named in a corresponding order, there is just one projective co/lineation that will transform the first into the second.
R
FIGURE 6.1B
PRooF. Let DEFPQR and D'E'F'P'Q'R' be the two given quadrilaterals, as in Figure 6.1B. We proceed to investigate the effect that such a
collineation should have on an arbitrary line a. There are certainly two
sides of the first quadrilateral that meet a in two distinct points. For
definiteness, suppose a is XY, with X on DE and Yon DQ. The projectivities
DEF 7i. D'E'F' and DQR 7i. D'Q'R' determine a line a'= X'Y', where
S2
TWo-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
is again a perspectivity. Thus a', like a, varies in a pencil: that is, concurrent
lines yield concurrent lines. We have not only a line-to-line transformation
but also a point-to-point transformation, preserving incidences, namely,
a collineation. The projectivity X 7i. X' suffices to make it a projective
collineation.
Finally, there is no other projective collineation transforming DEFPQR
into D' E'F'P' Q' R'; for, if another transformed a into at> the inverse of the
latter would take a 1 to a, the original collineation takes a to a', and altogether we would have a projective collineation leaving D' E' F'P' Q' R'
invariant and taking a 1 to a'. By 6.12, this combined collineation can only
be the identity. Thus, for every a, a 1 coincides with a': the "other" collineation is really the old one over again. In other words, the projective
collineation a - a' is unique.
In the statement of the theorem, we used the phrase "named in a corresponding order." This was necessary, because otherwise we could have
permuted the sides of one of the quadrilaterals in any one of 4! = 24 ways,
obtaining not just one collineation but 24 collineations.
We happened to use quadrilaterals, but the dual argument would immediately yield the same result for quadrangles.
EXERCISE
Let PQRS- P' Q' R' S' denote the projective collineation that relates two
given quadrangles PQRS and P' Q' R' S'; for instance, PQRS- PQRS is
the identity. Describe the special collineations
(i) PQRS- QPRS,
Hints:
(i) What happens to the lines PQ and RS?
(ii) What does Figure 3.4A tell us about the possibility of an invariant
line?
(iii) What happens to the linesPR, QS, and to the points QR PS, PQ RS?
6.1 Perspective Collineations
In Section 2.3, we obtained the Desargues configuration, Figure 2.3A, by
taking two triangles PQR and P'Q'R', perspective from 0. By 6.13, there is
just one projective collineation that transforms the quadrangle DEPQ into
DEP'Q'. This collineation, transforming the line o = DE into itself, and PQ
PERSPECTIVE COLLINEATIONS
53
into P' Q', leaves invariant the point o PQ = F = o P' Q'. By Axiom 2.18,
it leaves invariant every point on o. The join of any two distinct corresponding points meets o in an invariant point, and is therefore an invariant line.
The two invariant lines PP' and QQ' meet in an invariant point, namely 0.
FIGURE
6.2A
the given corresponding points. We proceed to set up a construction whereby each point R yields a definite corresponding point R'. If R coincides
with 0 or lies on o, it is, of course, invariant, that is, R' coincides with R.
If, as in Figure 2.3A, R i!; neither on o nor on OP, we have
R' = EP' OR, where E = o PR.
Finally, if R is on OP, as in Figure 6.28, we use an auxiliary pair of points
Q, Q' (of which the former is arbitrary while the latter is derived from it
the way we just now derived R' from R) to obtain
R' = DQ' OP, where D = o QR.
S4
TWo-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
FIGURE
6.2B
FIGURE
6.2c
6.23 An elation is determined when its axis and one pair of corresponding
points are given.
PRooF. Let o be the axis, P and P' the given pair. Since the collineation is known to be an elation, its center is o PP'. We proceed as in the
proof of 6.22, using Figures 6.2A and 6.2c instead of 2.3A and 6.2s.
This elation, with center o PP', is conveniently denoted by [o; P-P'].
6.24 Any co/lineation that has one range of invariant points (b11t not more
than one) is perspective.
PRooF. Since the identity is (trivially) a projectivity, 6.11 tells us that
any such collineation is projective. There cannot be more than one invariant
point outside the line o whose points are all invariant; for, two such would
form, with two arbitrary points on o, a quadrangle of the kind considered
in 6.12. If there is one invariant point 0 outside o, every line through 0
meets o in another invariant point; that is, every line through 0 is invariant.
Any noninvariant point P lies on such a line and is therefore transformed
into another point P' on this line OP; hence the collineation is a homology,
as in 6.22. If, on the other hand, all the invariant points lie on o, any two
distinct joins PP' and QQ' (of pairs of corresponding points) must meet o
in the same point 0, and the collineation is an elation, as in 6.23.
Hence, also,
6.25 If a co/lineation has a range of invariant points, it has a pencil of
invariant lines.
6.26 All the invariant points of an elation lie on its axis.
6.27 For a homology, the center is the only invariant point not on the axis.
EXERCISES
1. Let P, P', Q, Q', D be five points, no three collinear. Then there is a unique
perspective collineation that takes P to P', and Q to Q', while its axis
passes through D.
HARMONIC HOMOLOGY
SS
6. What kind of projective collineation will leave invariant two points and
two lines (the points not lying on the lines)?
7. Referring to Theorem 6.12, discuss the significance of the phrase "forming
a quadrilateral."
8. When the projective plane is regarded as an extension of the Euclidean
plane, what is the Euclidean name for a perspective collineation whose
axis is the line at infinity?
6.3 Involutory Collineations
Suppose a given transformation relates a point X to X', X' to X", X" to
to X<">. If, for every position of X, X'"> coincides with X
itself, the transformation is said to be periodic and the smallest n for which
this happens is called the period. Thus the identity is of period I, an involution
is (by definition) of period 2, and the projectivity ABC l\ BCA (for any three
distinct collinear points A, B, C) is of period 3.
We saw, in 6.22, that a homology is determined by its center 0, axis o, and
one pair of corresponding points P, P'. In the special case when the harmonic
conjugate of 0 with respect to P and P' lies on o, we speak of a harmonic
homology. Clearly
6.31 A. harmonic homology is determined when its center and axis are
given.
For any point P, the corresponding point P' is simply the harmonic conjugate of P with respect to 0 and o OP. Thus a harmonic homology is of
period 2. Conversely,
6.31 Every projective co/lineation of period 2 is a harmonic homology.
PRooF. Given a projective collineation of period 2, suppose it interchanges the pair of distinct points PP' and also another pair QQ' (not on
the linePP'). By6.13,it is the only projective collineation that transforms the
56
1Wo-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVITIES
FIGURE 6.3A
quadrangle PP' QQ' into P'PQ' Q. The invariant lines PP' and QQ' meet in
an invariant point 0, as in Figure 6.3A. Since the collineation interchanges
the pair of lines PQ, P'Q', and likewise the pair PQ', P'Q, the two points
M
are invariant. Moreover, the two invariant lines PP' and M N meet in a
third invariant point L on MN. By Axiom 2.18, every point on MN is
invariant. Thus the collineation is perspective (according to the definition
in Section 6.2). Since, by Axiom 2.17, its center 0 does not lie on its axis
MN, it is a homology. Finally, since H(PP', OL), it is a harmonic homology.
EXERCISES
1. What kind of transformation is the product of two harmonic homologies
having the same axis but different centers?
2. Any elation with axis o may be expressed as the product of two harmonic
homologies having this same axis o.
3. What kind of collineation is the product of three harmonic homologies
whose centers and axes are the vertices and opposite sides of a triangle?
4. The product of two harmonic homologies is a homology if and only if
the center of each lies on the axis of the other. In this case the product
is again a harmonic homology. (Reference 7, pp. 64-65.)
5. What is the Euclidean name for a harmonic homology whose axis is the
line at infinity?
PROJECTIVE CORRELATIONS
57
We have already considered a simple instance of a point-to-line transformation: the elementary correspondence that relates a range to a pencil
when the former is a section of the latter. We shall now extend this to a
transformation X---+ x' relating all the points in a plane to all the lines in the
same plane, and its dual x - X' which relates all the lines to all the points. A
correlation is a point-to-line and line-to-point transformation that preserves
the relation of incidence in accordance with the principle of duality. Thus it
transforms ranges into pencils, pencils into ranges, quadrangles into quadrilaterals, and so on. A correlation is a self-dual concept, the inverse of a
correlation is again a correlation, and the product of two correlations is a
collineation.
A projective correlation is a correlation that transforms every one-dimensional form projectively, so that, if it transforms the points Yon a line b into
the lines y' through the corresponding point B', the relation between Y andy'
is a projectivity Y 7i y'. There is a theorem analogous to 6.11 :
6.41 Any correlation that transforms one range projectively is a projective
correlation.
PROOF. Let a and A' be the corresponding line and point that carry
the projectively related range and pencil X 7i x'. We wish to establish the
same kind of relationship between any other corresponding pair, say b
and B' (see Figure 6.4A). Let Ybe a variable point on b, and 0 a fixed point
on neither a nor b. Let 0 Y meet a in X. The given correlation transforms
0 into a fixed line o' (through neither A' nor B'), and 0 Y into a point o' y'
which is joined to A' by a line x'. Since
0
o'
Y A X 7i x' A y',
v'.............._
~s
FIGURE 6.4A
58
TWo-DIMENSIONAL PROJECTIVmES
FIGURE 6.4B
PROOF. Let defpqr and D' E' F'P' Q' R' be the given quadrangle and
quadrilateral, as in Figure 6.48. What effect should such a correlation have
on an arbitrary point A? For definiteness suppose A is x y with x through
d e andy through d q. The projectivities def A D' E' F' and dqr 7i. D' Q' R'
determine a line a' = X' Y', where
PROJECTIVE CORRELAnONS
59
Since dis an invariant line of the perspectivity x 7\ y, D' must be an invariant point of the projectivity X' 7i. Y'. Thus a' varies in a pencil; that is,
collinear points yield concurrent lines. We have not only a point-to-line
transformation but also a line-to-point transformation, dualizing incidences,
namely, a correlation. The projectivity x 7i. X' suffices to make it a projective correlation.
Finally, there is no other projective correlation transforming defpqr into
D'E'F'P'Q'R'; for, if another transformed A into ab the inverse of the
latter would take a 1 to A, the original correlation takes A to a', and altogether we would have a projective collineation leaving D'E'F'P'Q'R'
invariant and taking a 1 to a'. As in Section 6.1, this establishes the uniqueness of the correlation A -+ a'.
The dual construction yields a projective correlation transforming a
given quadrilateral into a given quadrangle.
EXERCISE
If a correlation transforms a given quadrangle into a quadrilateral, it transforms the three diagonal points of the quadrangle into the three diagonal
lines of the quadrilateral.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
Polarities
Chasles was the last important member of the great French school
of projective geometers. After his time primacy in this subject
passed across the Rhine, never to return.
J. L. Coolidge (Reference 4, p. 58)
7.11
60
SELF-CONJUGATE POINTS
61
a: two distinct points would both have the same polar. This is impossible,
since a polarity is a one-to-one correspondence between points and lines.
The occurrence of self-conjugacy is further restricted as follows:
7.12 It is impossible for a line to contain more than two self-conjugate
points.
PRooF. Let p and q (through C) be the polars of two self-conjugate
points P and Q on a line c, as in Figure 7.1A. Let R be a point on p, distinct
from C and P. Let its polar r meet q in S. Then S = q r is the pole of
QR = s, which meets r in T, say. Also T = r s is the pole of RS = t,
c
FIGURE 7.1A
FIGURE 7.1B
62
POLARITIES
EXERCISES
1. Every self-conjugate line contains just one self-conjugate point.
2. If a and b are nonconjugate lines, every point X on a has a conjugate point
Yon b. The relation between X and Y is a projectivity. It is a perspectivity
if and only if the point a b is self-conjugate. (Reference 19, p. 124.) [Hint:
Use 4.22.]
3. Observe that the polarity of 7.12 (Figure 7.1A) relates the quadrangle
SELF-POLAR TRIANGLE
63
FIGURE 7.2A
Thus any triangle ABC, any point P not on a side, and any line p not through
a vertex, determine a definite polarity (ABC)(Pp), in which the polar x of
an arbitrary point X can be constructed by incidences.
This construction could be carried out by the method of 6.42, as applied to
the correlation ABCP- abcp. More elegantly, we could adapt the notation
of Figure 7.2A so that
Xa = a AX,
Xb = b BX,
A., = a x,
B., = b x.
64
POLAIUTIES
Then A" is the mate of X,. in the involution (BC)(P,.A 11 ), B" is the mate of X 11
in (CA)(P,B 11 ), and xis A:eB:e. A still simpler procedure will be described in
Section 7.4, but it seems desirable to deal with some other matters first.
Consider a polarity (ABC)(Pp), in which P does not lie on p (see Figure
7.2A). Since the polars of the points
A 11
a p,
B 11
b p,
C11
c p
are AP, BP, CP, the pairs of opposite sides of the quadrangle ABCP meet the
line p in pairs of conjugate points. Hence
7.11 In a polarity (ABC)(Pp), where Pis not on p, the involution of conjugate points on p is the involution determined on p by the quadrangle ABCP.
EXERCISES
1. In the notation of Figure 2.4A, any projective correlation that relates the
points S, D, E, F to the respective lines g, SA, SB, SC is a polarity.
2. Consider a polarity (ABC)(Pp) in which P is on p. Find Q and q, not
incident, so that the same polarity can be described as (ABC)(Qq).
POLAR TRIANGLES
FIGURE
65
7.3A
741 The polar of a point X (not on AP, BP, or p) in the polarity (ABC)(Pp)
is the line xlxll determined by
A 1 =a PX, P1 = p AX, X 1 = AP A1P1 ,
B 2 =bPX, P2 =pBX, X 2 =BPB2 P2
PRooF. Applying 7.31 to the triangle PAX, we deduce that its sides
AX, XP, PA meet the polars p, a, x of its vertices in three collinear points,
66
POLARITIES
FIGURE 7.4A
the first two of which are P 1 and A1 Hence x must meet PAin a point lying
onP1 A~> namely, in the pointPA P 1 A1 = X1 . That is, xpasses through X1
Similarly (by applying 7.31 to the triangle PBX instead of PAX), x passes
through X 11
This construction fails when X lies on AP, for then A 1P 1 coincides with
AP, and X 1 is no longer properly defined. However, since X 11 can still be
constructed as above, the polar of X is now A~>X11 (where A~>= a p).
Similarly, when X is on BP, its polar is X1B~>.
Finally, to locate the polar of a point X on p, we can apply the dual of the
above construction to locate the pole Y of a line y through X. This y may be
any line through X except p or P X. (It is convenient to choosey = AX or, if
this happens to coincide with P X, to choosey = BX.) Then the desired polar
is x = PY.
EXERCISES
1. For any point X, not on AP, BP, or p, the polar is
[AP (a PX)(p AX)][BP (b PX)(p BX)J.
Write out the dual expression for the pole of any line x, not through
or P, and draw a figure to illustrate this dual construction.
A~>,
B~>,
Deduce an alternative construction for the pole of a line WX, with Won
CA and X on AB.
SELFPOLAR PENTAGON
67
FIGURE 7.5A
EXERCISES
I. In the notation of Figure 7.2A, PBA,B,A is a self-polar pentagon.
2. Let X be any point on none of the sides p, r, sofa given self-polar pentagon
PQRST. Then its polar is the line
[r (t PX)(p TX)][s (q PX)(p QX)].
68
POLARITIES
(ODF)(Pp)
and (ODF)(P'p),
where p is any line not passing through a vertex of the common self-polar
triangle ODF. To prove this, we merely have to observe that the homology
and the product of polarities both transform the quadrangle 0 DFP into
ODFP'.
Unfortunately, this expression for a homology as the product of two polarities cannot in any simple way be adapted to an elation. Accordingly, it is
worthwhile to mention a subtler expression that applies equally well to either
kind of perspective collineation. Figure 7. 7A shows the homology or elati.>n
with center 0 and axis o = CP that transforms A into another point A' on the
line c = OA. Here C and Pare arbitrary points on the axis o (which passes
through 0 if the collineation is an elation). Let p be an arbitrary line through
0, meeting b = CA and b' = CA' in Q and Q'. Let B be an arbitrary point on
c. We proceed to verify that the given perspective collineation is the product of
the two polarities
(ABC)(Pp) and (A' BC)(Pp).
69
FIGURE 7.7A
FIGURE 7.78
70
POLARniES
does not lie on I' nor on/". Let I" meet I in B, I' in C. Of the two polarities
(AA" B)( A' I')
the former transforms the four points A, A', B, C = I' I" into the four
lines A" B = /" = A" C, I' = CA', A" A, A' A, and the latter transforms
these lines into the four points A', A", I' I"'= B', I" I"' = C'. Hence their
product is the same as the given collineation, which is what we wished to
prove.
This theorem has an interesting corollary which includes 6.25 as a special
case:
7.72 In any projective co/lineation, the invariant points and invariant lines
form a self-dual.figure.
EXERCISES
I. Can a projective collineation interchange two points without being a
harmonic homology?
2. If a projective collineation has three invariant points forming a triangle, it
is the product of two polarities having a common self-polar triangle.
7.8
/=RO,
d=O'f',
r=P'F,
o=FD,
p'=DR.
Since d passes through A, and I through C, the involution of pairs of conjugate points on o is (AD)(CF). The quadrangle OPQR yields the quadrangular relation (AD) (BE) (CF) and thus indicates that e (the polar
of E) is OB. Since Q' is r e, q' is RE; since Pis d q', p is DQ'; since
R' is I p, r' is FP; and since Q is p' r', q is P'R'. Thus EPQQ'R' is
another self-polar pentagon. Also the perspective triangles PQR and P'Q'R'
are polar triangles (as in Section 7.3). (This converse of Chasles's theorem
was discovered by von Staudt. See Reference 7, p. 75, Exercise 4.) In the
notation of Section 3.2 and the frontispiece,
There is a unique polarity for which G,1 IS the pole of g,l
CHAPTER
EIGHT
The Conic
72
THE CONIC
conic can be deduced from an extraordinarily natural and symmetrical definition which was given by von Staudt in his Geometrie der Lage (1847). We
shall find that, in the projective plane, there is only one kind of conic: the
familiar distinction between the ellipse, parabola, and hyperbola can only be
made by assigning a special role to the line at infinity.
,,,...
,.. ....
,/
'
'\
I
Locus
\
\
'
' ,,
....................
,,
FIGURE 8.1A
73
the conic twice or not at all, that is, according as the involution of conjugate
points on it is hyperbolic or elliptic. The above remarks show that, of the lines
through any point P on the conic, one (namely p) is a tangent and all the
others are secants. Moreover, if P and Q are any two distinct points on the
conic, the line PQ is a secant.
Dually, a point not lying on the conic is said to be exterior or interior
according as it lies on two tangents or on none, that is, according as the
involution of conjugate lines through it is hyperbolic or elliptic. Thus an
exterior point H is the pole of a secant h, and an interior point E (if such a
point exists) is the pole of a nonsecant e. Of the points on a tangent p, one
(namely P) is on the conic, and all the others are exterior. If p and q are any
two distinct tangents, the point p q (which is the pole of the secant PQ) is
exterior.
FIGURE
8.18
Figure 8.18 may help to clarify these ideas, but we must take care not to be
unduly influenced by real geometry. For instance, it would be foolish to
waste any effort on trying to prove that every point on a nonsecant is exterior,
or that every line through an interior point is a secant; for in some geometries
these "obvious" propositions are false.
Consider the problem of drawing a secant through a given point A. If A
is interior, we simply join A to any point P on the conic. (Since AP cannot be a
tangent, it must be a secant.) If A is on the conic, we join it to another point on
the conic. Finally, if A is exterior, we join it to each of three points on the
conic. Since at most two of the lines so drawn could be tangents, at least one
must be a secant.
On a secant PQ, the involution of conjugate points is (PP)(QQ). Hence, by
5.41,
74
THE CONIC
Conversely,
8.11 On a secant PQ, any pair of harmonic conjugates with respect to P
and Q is a pair of conjugate points with respect to the conic.
Dually,
8.13 Any two conjugate lines through an exterior point p q are harmonic
conjugates with respect to the two tangents p, q; and any pair of harmonic
conjugates with respect top and q is a pair of conjugate lines with respect to
the conic.
EXERCISES
I. Every point on a tangent is conjugate to the point of contact. Dually, the
tangent itself is conjugate to any line through the point of contact.
2. The polar of any exterior point joins the points of contact of the two tangents that can be drawn through the point. Dually, the pole of a secant PQ
is the point of intersection of the tangents at P and Q.
3. Is it true that every conic has exterior points?
4. Is it true that the polar of any interior point is a nonsecant?
S. If PQR is a triangle inscribed in a conic, the tangents at P, Q, R form a
INSCRIBED QUADRANGLE
75
FIGURE 8.2A
B = QS RP,
C = RS PQ,
as in Figure 8.2A. The line AB meets the sides PQ and RS in points C1 and
C2 such that H(PQ, CCI) and H(RS, CC2). By 8.12, both C1 and C2 are
conjugate to C. Thus the line AB, on which they lie, is the polar of C.
Similarly, BC is the polar of A, and CA of B.
Hence:
8.22 To construct the polar of a given point C, not on the conic1 draw
any two secants PQ and RS through C; then the polar joins the two points
QR PSandRP QS.
In other words, we draw two secants through C to form an inscribed
quadrangle with diagonal triangle ABC, and then the polar of Cis AB.
The dual construction presupposes that we know the tangents from any
exterior point. This presents no serious difficulty (since their points of contact lie on the polar of the given point); but the tangents are not immediately
apparent, for the simple reason that we are in the habit of dealing with
76
THE CONIC
EXERCISES
1. Let A and B be two conjugate points with respect to a given conic. Let an
arbitrary line through A meet the conic in Q and R, while BQ and BR
meet the conic again in S and P, respectively. Then A, S, P are collinear.
2. If PQR is a triangle inscribed in a conic, any point A on QR (except Q orR
or p QR) is a vertex of a self-polar triangle ABC with Bon RP and C on
PQ.
3. If ABC is a self-polar triangle for a given conic, any secant QR through A
provides a side of an inscribed triangle PQR whose remaining sides pass
through B and C, respectively.
4. A conic is transformed into itself by any harmonic homology whose
center is the pole of its axis.
S. The polars of the vertices of any quadrangle PQRS form a quadrilateral
pqrs such that the 3 diagonal points of PQRS are the poles of the 3 diagonal
lines of pqrs. (See the exercise at the end of Chapter 6.) What happens to
these 3 points and 3 lines in the special case when PQRS is an inscribed
quadrangle, so that p, q, r, s are tangents?
6. There is, in general, just one conic through three given points having
another given point as pole of a given line. (Reference 19, p. 137.) [Hint:
Let PQR be the given triangle, D and d the point and line. Let DP meet din
P'. LetS be the harmonic conjugate of P with respect to D and P'. Let ABC
be the diagonal triangle of the quadrangle PQRS. Consider the polarity
(ABC)(Dd).J
8.3 Projectively Related Pencils
77
C,
FIGURE
8.3A
We are now ready for one of the most significant properties of a conic:
8.32 STEINER's THEOREM: Let lines x andy join a variable point on a conic
to two fixed points on the same conic; then x 7\ y.
PROOF. The tangents p and q, at the fixed points P and Q, meet in D,
the pole of PQ (see Figure 8.3A). Let c be a fixed line through D (but not
through P or Q), meeting x in B, andy in A. By 8.31, BA is a pair of the
involution of conjugate points on c. Hence, when the point R = x y
varies on the conic, we have
X 7\ B 7\ A 7\ y,
as desired.
The following remarks make it natural for us to include the tangents p
and q as special positions for x andy. (Notice that the idea of "continuity,"
though intuitively helpful, is not assumed.) Writing d = PQ and C1 = c d,
consider the possibility of using P or Q as a position for R. When R is P, y is d,
A is C~o B is the conjugate point D, and therefore x is p. Similarly, when R is
Q, xis d, B is C~o A is D, andy is q. In other words, when y is d, xis p; and
when x is d, y is q.
EXERCISES
l. Dualize Seydewitz's theorem and Steiner's theorem (Figures 8.2A and
8.3A).
78
THE CONIC
Co
FIGURE
8.4A
If we are not given the conic, but only the points P, Q, R, D, we can still
construct C = PQ RD and its harmonic conjugate C1 Th~n c is the line
C1 D, which meets QR and RP in A and B. The conic itself can be described
as the locus of self-conjugate points (and the envelope of self-conjugate lines)
in the polarity (ABC)(Pp), where p =PD. Since PD and QD are the tangents
at P and Q, our conclusion may be stated as follows:
8.41 A conic is determined when three points on it and the tangents at two
of them are given.
19
Co
FIGURE
8.48
8.41 Of the conics that touch two given lines at git,en points, those which
meet a third line (not through either of the points) do so in pairs of an
involution.
EXERCISES
I. In Figure 8.4A, RC1 is the tangent at R. [Hint: Use 8.23 with R for A.]
80
THE CONIC
EXERCISES
1. Given a triangle PQR and a point 0, not on any side, what is the locus of
the trilinear pole of a variable line through 0? [Hint: In Figure 3.4A, let
PQR be fixed while DE varies in a pencil. Then A 7i. D A E 7i. B.]
2. Let P and Q be two fixed points on a tangent of a conic. If x is a variable
line through P, and X is the (variable) pole of x, what is the locus of
x Q X? (S. Schuster.*)
3. Give an explicit determination of the locus in Exercise 2, by naming a
sufficient number of special points on it.
4. Let P, Q, R, P', Q' be five points, no three collinear, and let x be a variable
line through P. Define
N=PQ'P'Q, M=RP'x, L=Q'RMN, R'=QLx.
What is the locus of R'?
Private communication.
CHAPTER
NINE
FIGURE 9.1A
FIGURE 9.18
81
82
FIGURE 9.1C
Hence
9.1l Any five lines, of which no three are concurrent, determine a unique
conic touching them.
By 4.32, the lined= PQ (Figure 9.1A) is the axis of the projectivity X ;:. Y;
that is, if A is a particular position of X and B is the corresponding position of
Y (Figure 9.lc), the point Z = AY BX always lies on this fixed line d.
In fact, if AB meets dinG, we have an expression for the projectivity as the
product of two perspectivities:
B
We may regard xyz as a variable triangle whose vertices run along fixed
lines p, q, d while the two sides yz and ZX pass through fixed points A and B.
We have seen that the envelope of XYis a conic touchingp at P, and q at Q.
More generally,
9.13
X7\Z7\ Y.
A CONIC ENVELOPE
83
FIGURE 9.10
E = p r, G = AB r,
I= AB p, J = AB q,
X=ZB DE,
Y=ZACD,
In Figure 9.lo, we see a hexagon ABCYXE whose six sides all touch a
conic. The three lines A Y, BX, CE, which join pairs of opposite vertices, are
naturally called diagonals of the hexagon. Theorem 9.14 tells us that, if the
diagonals of a hexagon are concurrent, the six sides all touch a conic.
Conversely, if all the sides of a hexagon touch a conic, five of them can be
identified with the lines DE, EA, AB, BC, CD. Since the given conic is the
only one that touches these fixed lines, the sixth side must coincide with one
of the lines XY for which BX A Y lies on CE. We have thus proved
9.15 BRIANCHON's THEOREM: If a hexagon is circumscribed about a conic,
the three diagonals are concurrent.
84
------------------,
/I
/
/
I
I
'
'
I
I
'
I
I
I
I
'
I
I
I
FIGURE 9.1E
EXERCISES
I. Apply Figure 9.Ic to Exercise 3 of Section 8.4.
2. Obtain a simple construction for the point of contact of any one of five
given tangents of a conic. [Hint: To locate the point of contact of p, in the
notation of Figure 9.lo, make Y coincide with D, as in Figure 9.1F.]
3. Measure off points X 0 , X~> ... , X 5 at equal intervals along a line, and
Y0 , Y1 , , Y5 similarly along another line through X 5 = Y0 What kind
of conic do the joins Xk Yk appear to touch? Draw some more tangents.
FIGURE 9.1F
A CONIC LOCUS
85
FIGURE 9.2A
FIGURE 9.28
This enables us (as in Figure 9.2o, where the variable triangle is shaded) to
locate any number of points on the conic through five given points.
The dual of 9.15 is the still more famous
9.23 PASCAL's THEOREM: If a hexagon is inscribed in a conic, the three
pairs of opposite sides meet in collinear points.
In Figure 9.2c, the hexagon is abcdef and the three collinear points are
a d, b e, c f We have obtained Pascal's theorem by dualizing Brianchon's.
Historically, this procedure was reversed: C. J. Brianchon (1760-1854)
obtained his theorem by dualizing Pascal's, at a time when the principle of
duality was just beginning to be recognized. Pascal's own proof (for a
hexagon inscribed in a circle) was seen and praised by G. W. Leibniz (16461716) when he visited Paris, but afterwards it was lost. All that remains of
Pascal's relevant work is a brief Essay pour les coniques (1640), in which the
theorem is stated as follows:
Si dans le plan MSQ du point M partent les deux droites MK, MV, & du point
86
FIGURE
9.2c
S partent les deux droites SK, SV & par les points K, V passe Ia circonference
d'un cercle coupante les droites MV, MK, SV, SK es pointes 0, P, Q, N: je dis
que les droites MS, NO, PQ sont de mesme ordre.
EXERCISES
1. Given five points (no three collinear), construct the tangent at each point
to the conic through all of them.
2. Given a quadrangle PQRS and a line s through S (but not through any
other vertex), construct another point on the conic through P, Q, R that
touches s at S.
3. Given six points on a conic, in how many ways can they be regarded as the
vertices of a Pascal hexagon ?
4. Name the hexagon in Pascal's own notation.
S. Try to reconstruct Pascal's lost proof (using only the methods that would
have been available in his time).
CEuvres de Blaise Pascal, edited by L. Brunschvicg and P. Boutroux, 1 (Libraire Hachette: Paris, 1908), p. 252. Pascal actually wrote MPfor MK, but this was obviously a slip.
By "de mesme ordre" he meant "in the same pencil" or, in the terminology of modern
projective geometry, "concurrent." Compare "d'une mesme ordonnance" in the passage
of Desargues that we quoted on page 3. Pascal was the first person who properly appreciated the work of Desargues. The complete statement may be translated as follows:
If, in the plane MSQ, two lines MK and MV are drawn through M, and two lines SK,
S V through S, and if a circle through K and V meets the four lines M V, M K, S V, SK in
points 0, P, Q, N, then the three lines MS, NO, PQ belong to a pencil.
Although nobody knows just how Pascal proved this property of a circle, there is no
possible doubt about how he deduced the analogous property of the general conic. He
joined the circle and lines to a point outside the plane, obtaining a cone and planes; then
he took the section of this solid figure by an arbitrary plane.
87
FIGURE 9.3A
PROOF. Let PQRS be the given quadrangle, and g the given line,
meeting the sides PS, QS, QR, PR in A, B, D, E, and any one of the conics
in T and U (see Figure 9.3A). By regarding S, R, T, U as four positions of a
variable point on this conic, we see from 8.32 that the four lines joining them
to P are projectively related to the four lines joining them to Q. Hence
88
9.41 If two triangles have six distinct vertices, all lying on a conic, there is a
polarity for which both triangles are self-polar.
And conversely (Figure 9.4A},
s
FIGURE 9.4A
89
9.42 If two triangles, with no vertex of either on a side of the other, are
self-polar for a given polarity, their six vertices lie on a conic and their six
sides touch another conic.
EXERCISES
I. How many polarities can be expected to arise in the manner of 9.41 from
six given points on a conic?
2. If two triangles have six distinct vertices, all lying on a conic, their six
sides touch another conic.
3. If two conics are so situated that there is a triangle inscribed in one and
circumscribed about the other, then every secant of the former conic that is
a tangent of the latter can be used as a side of such an inscribed-circumscribed triangle.
4. Let P, Q, R, S, T be five points, no three collinear. Then the six points
A= QRPS,
A'= QRPT,
B= RP QS,
C=PQRS,
= RP QT,
C'=PQRT
B'
FIGURE 9.5A
90
~
d
FIGURE 9.58
FIGURE 9.5C
c
FIGURE 9.50
CHAPTER TEN
(Reference 9, p. 43)
10.1 The Idea of a Finite Geometry
The above words of Forder emphasize the fact that our primitive concepts
are defined solely by their properties as described in the axioms. This fact is
most readily appreciated when we abandon the "intuitive" idea that the
number of points is infinite. We shall find that all our theorems remain valid
(although the figures are somewhat misleading) when there are only 6 points
on each line, and 31 points in the plane.
In 1892, Fano described ann-dimensional geometry in which the number of
points on each line is p + I for a fixed prime p. In 1906, 0. Veblen and
W. H. Bussey gave this finite Projective Geometry the name PG(n, p) and
extended it to PG(n, q), where q = pk, p is prime, and k is any positive integer.
(For instance, q may be 5, 7, or 9, but cannot be 6.)
Without realizing the necessity for restricting the possible values of q to
primes and their powers, von Staudt obtained the following numerical results
in 1856. Since any range or pencil can be related to any other by a sequence
of elementary correspondences, the number of points ona line must be the
same for all lines, and the same as the number of lines in a pencil (that is,
91
92
lying in a plane and passing through a point) or the number of planes through
a line in three-dimensional space. Let us agree to call this number q + 1. In
a plane, any one point is joined to the remaining points by a pencil which
consists of q + 1 lines, each containing the one point and q others. Hence the
plane contains
q(q + 1)
+ 1 = q2 + q + 1
points and (dually) the same number of lines. In space, any line lis joined
to the points outside l by q + 1 planes, each containing the q + 1 points on
l and q2 others. Hence the whole space contains
(q + 1)(q2 + 1) = q3 + q2
+q + 1
+ qn-1 + ... + q + 1 =
q n+l- 1
~--
q- 1
It was proved by J. Singer (Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 43 (1938), pp. 377-385)
that every geometry of this kind can be represented by a combinatorial
scheme such as the one exhibited on page 94 for the special case PG(2, 5).
EXERCISES
1. In PG(3, q) there are q + I points on each line, how many lines (or planes)
through each point? How many lines in the whole space? [Hint: Every
two of the q3 + q2 + q --l- l points determine a line, but each line is
determined equally well by any two of its q + l points.]
2. How many triangles occur in PG(2, q)?
3. In the notation of Section 3.2, PG(2, q) is a configuration nd. Express n and
din terms of q.
In accordance with the general formula, the finite projective plane PG(2, 5)
has 6 points on each line, 6 lines through each point,
52
+5+1=
53 - 1 = 31
5-1
93
points altogether, and of course also 31 lines. The appropriate scheme uses
symbols P 0 , PI> . . , P 30 for the 31 points, and /0 , / 1, , / 30 for the 31 lines,
with a table (page 94) telling us which are the 6 points on each line and which
are the 6 lines through each point.
For good measure, this table gives every relation of incidence twice: each
column tells us which points lie on a line and also which lines pass through a
point; e.g., the last column says that the line /0 contains the six points
Po, P1, Pa, Pa, Pu, plB
Thus the notation exhibits a polarity Pr-lr. Marshall Hall (Cyclic projective planes, Duke Math. J. 14 (1947), pp. 1079-1090) has proved that
such a polarity always occurs. (Our lr is his m-r) By regarding the subscripts
as residues modulo 31, so that r + 31 has the same significance as r itself, we
can condense the whole table into the simple statement that the point Pr and
line I, are incident if and only if
10.21
r + s == 0, I, 3, 8, I2, or I8 (mod 31).
The "congruence" a = b (mod n) is a convenient abbreviation for the
statement that a and b leave the same remainder (or "residue") when
divided by n. The residues 0, I, 3, 8, I2, I8 (mod 31) are said to form a
"perfect difference set" because every possible residue except zero (namely,
1, 2, 3, ... , 30) is uniquely expressible as the difference between two of these
special residues:
I== I - 0, 2 == 3- I, 3 == 3-0, 4 == I2- 8, ,
13 = 0 - I8, ... '30 == 0 - I.
The impossibility of a PG(2, 6) is related in a subtle manner to the
impossibility of solving Euler's famous problem of the 36 officers (Reference
l,p.190).
EXERCISES
I. Set up a table of differences (mod 31) of the residues 0, I, 3, 8, 12, I8,
analogous to the following table of differences (mod 13) of 0, I, 3, 9:
I2
I
0
3
9
IO
4
11
5
3
2
0
7
8
6
0
2
3
9 10 11 12
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
I4
10
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
r I 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11
Table of possible values of s, given r, such that Pr and /, (or /rand P,) are incident
9S
2. Set up an incidence table for PG(2, 3), assuming that Pr and I, are incident
if and only if
r + s 0, I, 3, or 9 (mod 13).
Any two distinct points are incident with just one line.
AxioM 3.11
AxiOM 3.12
AxioM 2.17
linear.
If a projectivity leaves invariant each of three distinct points
on a line, it leaves invariant every point on the line.
AxioM 2.18
/1 /7 = Pw
Ia lao = Pe.
Axiom 2.18 is superseded by Theorem 3.51 because a harmonic net fills the
whole line. In fact, the harmonic net R{P0 P 1 P 18) contains the harmonic
sequence P 0 P 1P 3 P 18P 8 .To verify this, we use the procedure suggested by
Figure 3.5A, taking A, B, M, P, Q to be P 0 , P 1 , P 18 , P6 , P 30 , so that C = P 3,
D = Pl'l. E = P 8 , F = P 0 =A. Since there are only six points on the line,
the sequence is inevitably periodic: the five points
are repeated cyclically for ever. Instead of taking P and Q to be P6 and P 30,
we could just as well have taken them to be any other pair of points on /13 or
Itt or /18 or /21 or /85 (these being, with /0 , the lines through P 18); we would
still have obtained the same harmonic sequence.
96
FIGURE
10.3A
EXERCISES
1. Set up an incidence table for PG(2, 2}, assuming that Pr and 1. are incident
if and only if
r + s =:; 0, I, or 3 (mod 7).
Verify that this "geometry" satisfies all our two-dimensional axioms
except Axiom 2.17.
10.4 Involutions
PROJECTIVITIES
9'fl
where i, j, k are any three distinct numbers selected from 0, I, 3, 8, 12, 18.
Hence there are just 6 5 4 = 120 projectivities (including the identity).
Of these, as we shall see, 25 are involutions: 15 hyperbolic and 10 elliptic.
In fact, if i and j are any two of the six numbers, there is a hyperbolic involution (P1P1)(PiPi) which interchanges the remaining four numbers in pairs in a
definite way. The other two possible ways of pairing those four numbers
must each determine an elliptic involution which interchanges Pt and P1
For instance, the hyperbolic involution {P12P 12){P18P 18), interchanging P 3 and
P 8 , must also interchange P 0 and P1, and is expressible as (P0P 1)(P3 P 8); but
both the involutions
interchange P12 and P 18 , and are therefore elliptic.
EXERCISES
1. In PG(2, 3), how many projectivities are there on a line? How many of
them are involutions? How many of the involutions are elliptic?
2. In PG(2, q), the q3 - q projectivities on a line include just q2 involutions:
q(q + 1)/2 hyperbolic and q(q - 1)/2 elliptic.*
3. In PG(2, 3), the four points on a line form a harmonic set in every possible
order. (G. Fano.t)
4. In PG(2, 5), any four distinct points on a line form a harmonic set in a
suitable order. In fact, H(AB, CD) if and only if the involution (AB)(CD) is
hyperbolic. In other words, each of the fifteen pairs of points on the line
induces a separation of the six into three mutually harmonic pairs. (W.L.
Edge, "31-point geometry," Math. Gazette, 39 (1955), p. 114, section 3.)
98
collineation may transform P0 into any one of the 31 points, and P 1 into any
one of the remaining 30. It may transform P 2 into any one of the 31 - 6 = 25
points not collinear with the first two. The number of points that lie on at
least one side of a given triangle is evidently 3 + (3 4) = 15; therefore the
number not on any side is 16. Hence PG(2, 5) admits altogether
31 . 30. 25. 16
= 372000
= 775.
Apart from the identity, the two most obvious collineations are Pr---+- Pl>r
(of period 3, since 53
I (mod 31)) and Pr---+- Pr+1 (of period 31). The
criterion 6.11 assures us that they are projective. In fact, the corresponding
ranges of the former on P oP1 and P0 P5 are related by the perspectivity
Pu
and the corresponding ranges of the latter on P 0 P1 and P1P2 are related by a
projectivity with axis PoP2 :
EXERCISES
1. Express the collineation Pr---+- Pl>r as a transformation of lines. What
happens to the incidence condition (l 0.21)?
2. How many projective collineations exist in PG(2, 3)? How many of them
are of period 2?
3. In PG(2, q), how many points are left invariant by
(i) an elation,
(ii) a homology?
10.6 Conics
SELF-POLAR TRIANGLES
99
(~) =
15 secants
/1 = PoP17, /2 = PaP1&
Ia
PoPe.
Is
PoP,, In = PoPe,
lu, = P,P17, l15 = P1eP17, l1s = PoP16, l22 = P,Pl7, l2a = P,P1e
/25 =PaP,, l2s = PaP17, l27 = P4P1e l2s = P,Pe, lao = P,P,.
100
symbol (ABC)(Pp) with P not on p. When only one side is a secant, 2 of the 6
points are on this side and the remaining 4 are among the 16; therefore each
hyperbolic polarity (with ABC of the second type) is named 4 times with P on
p and 12 times with P not on p. Conversely, if Plies on p, ABC can only be of
the second type; therefore the number of such hyperbolic polarities (each
accounting for 4 of the 48 symbols) is 12. Since each hyperbolic polarity
(or conic) has 5 self-polar triangles of the first type and 15 of the second, the
number of hyperbolic polarities in which a gi;en triangle ABC is of the first
type is one-third of 12, that is, 4. The total number of symbols (ABC)(Pp)
that denote hyperbolic polarities is thus
48
+ 16 . 4 + 12 . 12 = 256.
EXERCISES
1. In PG(2, 5), express the collineation Pr-+ P5r (or I, -+/5,+ 3) as the product
of two polarities.
2. Derive the number of conics in PG(2, 5) from the number of sets of 5
points, no 3 collinear.
In other words, every polarity is hyperbolic. This is true not only in complex geometry
and in PG(2, 5) but in PG(2, q) for every q = pk. SeeP. Scherk, Can. Math. Bull., :Z (1959),
pp. 45-46, or Segre (Reference IS, pp. 266-268).
t Analogous reasoning shows that the number of conics in PG(2, q) is q - q1 See B.
Segre, Le geometrie di Galois, Ann. Matematica (4), 48 (1959), pp. 1-96, especially p. 4.
101
3. In PG(2, 5), how many conics can be drawn through the vertices of a
given triangle? [Hint: Use 9.21.] How many triangles can be inscribed in a
given conic? (These results provide another method for determining the
total number of conics.)
4. How many conics exist in PG(2, 3)? In what sense doe!> 9.21 remain valid
when there are only 4 points on a conic?
5. Does a conic in PG(2, 3) admit a self-polar triangle all of whose sides are
nonsecants?
6. In any projective plane, let us say that a point Q is accessible from a point
P if it is the harmonic conjugate of P with respect to some pair of distinct
points which are conjugate (to each other) in a given polarity. Then P is
accessible from itself; if Q is accessible from P, P is accessible from Q;
if Q is accessible from R, and R from P, Q is accessible from P. In other
words, the relation of accessibility is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive.
7. When the notion of accessibility (Exercise 6) is applied to a hyperbolic
polarity, which points are accessible from:
(i) a point on the conic,
(ii) an exterior point,
(iii) an interior point?
8. If the notion of accessibility could be applied to an elliptic polarity in
PG(2, q), how many points would be accessible from a given point P:
(i) on a line through P,
(ii) in the whole plane?
(F. Bachmann, Aufbau der Geometrie aus dem Spiegelungsbegri.ff, Springer
Verlag: Berlin, 1959, pp. 123-124.)
9. There are no elliptic polarities in PG(2, q).
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
Parallelism
Projective geometry was historically developed as a part of Euclidean geometry.... Von Staudt, for instance, still needed the
parallel axiom in his study of the foundations of projective geometry. Klein, in his work on non-Euclidean geometry, established
the independence of projective geometry from the theory of parallels
(in 1871). This opened the possibility of an independent foundation
for projective geometry. The pioneer work was done by Moritz
Pasch (in 1882).
D. J. Struik (1894)
(Reference 17, p. 72 )
103
FIGURE ll.lA
104
PARALLELISM
COPLANAR LINES
lOS
these may be any two lines that meet; an axial pencil is determined by any two
of its planes, and these may be any two planes that meet; finally, a bundle
(like a flat pencil) is determined by any two of its lines.
EXERCISE
A range, a flat pencil, and an axial pencil are three kinds of one-dimensional
form. Which two are space-duals of each other? Which one is its own dual
(that is, which one is "self-dual")?
11.3 How Two Coplanar Lines Determine a Flat Pencil and a Bundle
If (in ordinary space) we are given a point P, and two coplanar lines a and b
whose point of intersection 0 is inconveniently far away, how can we construct
the line through P of the pencil or bundle determined by a and b? If 0 were
available we could simply draw OP, but can we still locate this line without
using 0? If Pis not in the plane ab, we merely have to draw the planes Pa and
Ph; these meet in a line p through P, which is the desired line of the bundle
(see Figure I 1.3A). In a single symbol, the member through P (outside the
plane ab) is the line
p =PaPb.
On the other hand, if P is in the plane ab, we can use an auxiliary point Q
outside the plane, locate the member q through Q (which is the line OQ), and
consider (as in Figure I I .3B) the line of intersection of the planes ab and Pq.
In other words, the line through P (of the bundle or pencil) is now
p
ab Pq where q
Qa Qb.
This construction owes its importance to the fact that it remains valid when a
and bare parallel, so that 0 does not exist! The lines a, b, q, p, which originally
passed through 0, are now all parallel.
A practical model for this new situation is easily made by dividing a
rectangular card into four unequal strips (of widths roughly proportional to
FIGURE 11.3A
FIGURE 11.3B
J06
PARALLELISM
I I
I I
FIGURE 11.3c
EXERCISE
Two lines parallel to the same line are parallel to each other. Does this
remain true
(i) when the word "lines" is replaced by "planes,"
(ii) when the word "line" is replaced by "plane,"
(iii) when both substitutions are made simultaneously?
B~L-b
PLANES
107
----:---fJ_ _ _ _ , /
;\
b,
.,------------"-7
I .~L
I
/
'
I
I
'
"
'
~-----------,
~~~l_;__~_____" __-J~
/
a,
FIGURE 11.4A
the previous construction. We take any two intersecting lines a 1 and a2 in IX,
and a point Bin {J (but not in either of the planes Pa1o Pa2), and draw the lines
b1 = Ba1 {J,
b2 = Ba2 {J,
P1 = Pa1 Pbb
p 2 = Pa2 Pb2,
as in Figure 11.4A. Then the desired plane through Pis p 1p 2 For, if IX and {J
meet in a line o, we may assume a 1 and a2 to be chosen so as to meet o in two
distinct points 0 1 and 0 2 Since 0 1 = o a 1 lies in both the planes Ba1 and {J,
it lies on their common line b1 Since 0 1 lies in both the planes Pa1 and Pb~o it
lies on their common line p 1 Similarly 0 2 lies on Pa Therefore the join
o = 0 10 2 lies in the plane P1Pz
If, on the other hand, IX and {J are parallel planes (conveyed by parallelograms
in Figure 11.4A), the construction makes the lines b1 and p 1 parallel to a1 , and
the lines b2 and p 2 parallel to a2 ; therefore the plane p 1p 2 is parallel to IX and {J.
Allowing P to take various positions, we thus obtain a pencil of parallel
planes, consisting of all the planes parallel to a given plane.
A familiar instance is the set of all "horizontal"planes. If we insist that two
horizontal planes are not strictly parallel but intersect in a line called the
"horizon," then we have an ordinary axial pencil instead of a pencil of
parallel planes.
EXERCISE
Can two lines be parallel to the same plane without being coplanar?
11.5 The Language of Pencils and Bundles
We have seen that a bundle can be derived from two of its lines, and an
axial pencil from two of its planes, by constructions that remain valid when
the two lines or planes are parallel.
]08
PARALLELISM
Since an ordinary bundle consists of all the lines and planes through a
point, and an ordinary axial pencil consists of all the planes through a line,
any simple statement about points and lines can be "translated" into a
corresponding statement about bundles and axial pencils. For instance, the
statement
Any two distinct points lie on a line
becomes:
The common planes of any two distinct bundles form an axial pencil.
It is significant that the latter statement remains true when one of the
bundles is replaced by a bundle of parallels, and again when both are replaced
by bundles of parallels. In fact, the common planes of an ordinary bundle and
a bundle of parallels form the ordinary axial pencil whose axis is the common
line of the two bundles. (For instance, the bundle of lines and planes through
any point 0 shares with the bundle of vertical lines and planes the vertical
line through 0 and all the planes through this line.) Again, the common
planes of two bundles of parallels form a pencil of parallel planes. (For
instance, the bundle whose lines are horizontal in the north-south direction
and the bundle whose lines are horizontal in the east-west direction have in
common all the horizontal planes.)
EXERCISE
Translate the following statement into the language of pencils and bundles:
IDEAL ELEMENTS
109
ideal points. On the other hand, since a bundle of parallels contains ordinary
axial pencils as well as pencils of parallel planes, an ideal point lies on some
ordinary lines as well as on some ideal lines. Since any ordinary line belongs to
just one bundle of parallels (consisting of all the lines and planes parallel to it),
it contains just one ideal point, which we call its point at infinity. Thus we
regard any two parallel lines as meeting in an ideal point: their common
point at infinity. Since any plane belongs to just one pencil of parallel planes
(consisting of all the planes parallel to it), it contains just one ideal line, which
we call its line at infinity. Thus we regard any two parallel planes as meeting in
an ideal line: their common line at infinity. In a given plane, each point on
the line at infinity is the "center" of a pencil of parallel lines.
Since any two pencils of parallel planes belong to a bundle of parallels,
Any two idea/lines meet in an ideal point.
It follows that, if a and b are any two ideal lines, every other ideal line
meets both a and b. This state of affairs resembles what happens in a plane.
For, if a and bare two ordinary intersecting lines, every point in the plane ab
lies on a line that meets both a and b. Accordingly, it is appropriate to regard
the set of all ideal points and ideal lines as forming an ideal plane: the plane
at infinity. This makes it possible to assert that any two intersecting (or
parallel) lines determine a plane through both of them. If one of the lines is
ordinary this is an ordinary plane; if both are ideal it is the plane at infinity.
Since each point (or line) at infinity is joined to an ordinary point 0 by an
ordinary line (or plane), the points and lines of the projective plane may
simply be regarded as a "new language" for the lines and planes (respectively)
through 0. In other words,
The projective plane is faithfully represented by a bundle.
EXERCISE
Examine all the Axioms 2.1l-2.18 for projective space, verifying that each
is satisfied in our "extended" space, that is, in the ordinary affine space plus
the plane at infinity with all its points and lines.
110
PARALLELISM
EXERCISE
Let P and Q be two distinct points in Euclidean space. What is the locus of
the point of intersection of a variable line through P and the perpendicular
plane through Q?
Melvin Hausner, "The Center of Mass and Affine Geometry,'' Am. Math. Monthly,
69 (1962),
p. 730.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Coordinates
112
COORDINATES
Setting aside all ideas of measurement, let us now build up the analytic
geometry of the projective plane in the manner proposed by Hardy, that is, as
consisting entirely of definitions and theorems, beginning with the definitions
of point, line, and incidence.
A point is the set of all triads equivalent to a given triad {x1, x 2, x 3). In
other words, a point is an ordered set of three numbers (xlt x 2, x 3), not all
zero, with the understanding that (Ax1 , .ilx2, h 3) is the same point for any
nonzero .il. For instance, (2, 3, 6) is a point, and ( -l, -l, -1) is another
way of writmg the same point.
A line is the set of all triads equivalent to a given triad [X1 , X2 , X 3 ]. In
113
other words, a line is defined in the same manner as a point, but with square
brackets instead of ordinary parentheses, and with capital letters to represent
the three numbers. Thus [3, 2, -2] is a line, and [ -1, -i, i] is the same line.
We shall find that the point (xi> x 2, x 3 ) and the line [x1 , x 2 , x 3 ) (with the
same x's) are related by a polarity, but the apparently special role of this
polarity is a notational accident.
The point (x) and line [X], meaning (x1, x 2, x 3 ) and [X1, X2 , X 3 ), are said to
be incident (the point lying on the line and the line passing through the point)
if and only if
{xX} = 0
in the notation of (12.1I). For instance, (2, 3, 6) lies on [3, 2, -2). It follows
that any discussion can be dualized by interchanging small and capital letters,
round and square brackets.
The three numbers xi are called the coordinates (or "homogeneous
coordinates," or "projective coordinates") of the point (x). The three numbers
Xi are called the coordinates (or "line coordinates," or "envelope coordinates," or "tangential coordinates") of the line [X].
If (x) is a variable point on a fixed line [X], we call {Xx} = 0 the equation
of the line [X], because it is a characteristic property of points on the line.
For instance, the line [3, 2, -2] has the equation
3x1
+ 2x
2 -
2x3
Dually, if [X] is a variable line through a fixed point (x), we call {xX} = 0
(which is the same as {Xx} = 0) the equation of the point (x), because it is a
characteristic property of lines through the point. For instance, the point
(2, 3, 6) has the equation
2X1
+ 3X~ + 6X = 0,
3
and the point (1, 0, 0) has the equation X1 = 0. Thus the coordinates of a
line or point are the coefficients in its equation (with zero for any missing
term).
The three points (1, 0, 0), (0, I, 0), (0, 0, I), or Xi = 0 (i = 1, 2, 3), and
the three lines [1, 0, 0], [0, I, 0], [0, 0, I], or xi = 0, are evidently the vertices
and sides of a triangle. We call this the triangle of reference (see Figure 12.2A).
The point (I, I, 1) and line [I, I, I] are called the unit point and unit line. We
shall find, in Section I2.4, that there is nothing geometrically special about
this triangle and point and line, except that the point does not lie on a side,
the line does not pass through a vertex, and the point is the trilinear pole of
the line (see Section 3.4).
By eliminating X~o X2, X3 from the equations
{xX} = 0,
{yX}
0,
{zX} = 0
114
COORDINATES
FIGURE
12.2A
of three given points (x), (y), (z), we find the necessary and sufficient condition
(11.21)
Yt Y Ya = 0
'*
If (y) and (z) are distinct points, A 0. Hence the general point collinear
with (y) and (z) is (p.y1 + 'JIZ~o p.y2 + 'JIZ2, p.y8 + 'JIZa) or, briefly,
(p.y
+ 'JIZ)
+ z).
If we are concerned with only one such point, we may allow the p. to be
absorbed too; thus three distinct collinear points may be expressed as (y), (z),
LINEAR DEPENDENCE
11 S
(y
z). However, this last simplification cannot be effected simultaneously
on two lines if thereby one point would have to absorb two different parameters. The symbol (py
z) can be made to include every point on the line
(y)(z) if we accept the convention that the point (y) is (py
z) with p = oo.
Dually, the condition for three lines [X], [ Y], [Z] to be concurrent is
X1
Xe X 3
(12.11)
Z 1 Ze
Za
the general line concurrent with [ Y] and [Z] is [p Y + 11Z]; and any particular
line concurrent with [ Y] and [Z], but distinct from them, may be expressed as
[Y + Z].
EXERCISES
1. Where does the unit line [I, I, I] meet the sides of the triangle of reference?
2. Copy Figure 12.2A (without the coordinate symbols) and add the lines
[0, I, 1], [-1, 0, I], [I, I, 0]. Are these lines concurrent?
3. What line joins the points (I, I, I) and (I, -1, 0)? Where does it meet
[I, 0, OJ?
4. The line joining (I, 0, 0) to (x1, x 11 , x 3) is [0, x 3 , -x2 ]. Where does it
meet [I, 0, OJ?
S. If the triangle of reference is the diagonal triangle of a quadrangle having
(1, I, I) for one vertex, where are the other three vertices? (See Exercise
I of Section 3.3.)
+ z) to lie on [X]?]
7. Obtain coordinates for the various points and lines in Figure 3.4A, beginning with
A = (1, 0, 0),
B = (0, I, 0),
C = (0, 0, 1),
S = (x1, x 11 , x 3).
Deduce the condition x 1 X1 = x 11 X 11 = x 8 X3 for the point (x) and line [X]
to be trilinear pole and polar with respect to the triangle of reference.
8. Where is the harmonic conjugate of (xi> x 2 , 0) with respect to (1, 0, 0) and
(0, I, 0)?
116
COORDINATES
Z1
(11.31)
Since the side PS joins (p) to the diagonal point A = QR PS, we may take A
(on QR, but distinct from Q and R) to be (q + r), and S (on PA, but distinct
from P and A) to be (p + q + r), meaning
Pt P Pa
(12.32)
Similar ideas provide a simple proof for Desargues's theorem (cf. page 38).
Let the first triangle PQR and the center of perspective 0 be (p)(q)(r) and (u).
There is no loss of generality in taking the second triangle P' Q' R' to be
(p
117
The point D = QR Q' R', being collinear with (q) and (r) and also with
(q + u) and (r + u), can only be (q- r). Similarly, E is (r- p), and F is
(p - q). These points D, E, Fare collinear since
+ (r, -
p,)
+ (pi -
qi) = 0
(i = I, 2, 3).
+ z)
(z),
(y
[Z],
[Y + Z].
(y),
From the information that P and p are incident in these three cases, can we
deduce that, when P is (p.y + z), p is (,u Y + Z] with the same ,u? Yes! Since
{( Y
+ Z)(y + z)} =
I Yyl
= 0,
{Zz}
= 0,
{Yz}
+ {Zy} = 0,
whence
{(p. Y + Z)(p.y
+ z)(p.y + z)
i\ [ Y][Z][ }""
+ Z](,u Y + Z]
holds not only for an elementary correspondence but for any projectivity
from a range to a pencil; and of course we have also
118
COORDINATES
This is the algebraic version of the Fundamental Theorem 4.12, from which
Axiom 2.18 can be deduced as a special case.
It is interesting to compare this verification of the axioms with what we did
in Section 10.3. An important difference is that, whereas PG(2, 5) is a single
(categorical) geometry, the analytic geometry that we are discussing now has
the same degree of freedom as the synthetic geometry itself. More advanced
treatises give synthetic proofs that the points on a line can be "added" and
"multiplied" so as to constitute the elements of a field. (Chapters 7 and II of
Reference 7 remain valid when all references to order and continuity have
been omitted.) In other words, projective geometry becomes categorical as
soon as the field of coordinates has been specified.
EXERCISES
+ z) 7\ (p.'y + z),
where p' = (a.p + P)f(yp + 15), a.l5 =F py.
(p.y
5. Give an equation (or equations) for the general projectivity on the line
[0, 0, I).
6. Under what circumstances will the projectivity described in Exercise 4 or 5
be:
(i) an involution,
(ii) parabolic?
7. When four distinct collinear points are expressed in the form
(y),
(z),
(y
+ z),
(p.y
+ z),
the number p is called the cross ratio of the four points. There is an analogous
definition for the cross ratio of four concurrent lines. Two such tetrads are
projectively related if and only if they have the same cross ratio.
8. For two points (y), (z) and two lines [ Y], [Z], the expression
{yY}{zZ}
{yZ}{zY}
CROSS RATIO
119
is equal to the cross ratio of the two given points with the points in which
their join meets the two lines.
9. The cross ratio of(a, I, 0), (b, I, 0), (c, I, 0), (d, I, 0) is
(a- c)(b- d)
(a- d)(b- c)
(11.41)
+ q.x, + rsxa,
+ qaxa + TaXa,
(Ap + M + vr) which
x:" = PzXl
X a = PaX1
{X'p}x1
+ {X'q}x2 + {X'r}x3 =
0,
into (p)(q)(r)(p
120
COORDINATES
by a suitable choice of the p's and q's and r's, it is the general projective
collineation (see 6.13).
This collineation, which shifts the points (x) to new positions (x 1 ), is the
active or alibi aspect of the linear homogeneous transformation (12.41).
There is also a passive or alias aspect: a coordinate transformation that gives
a new name to each point. In fact, we may regard (p)(q)(r) as a new triangle of
reference, with respect to which the point that we have been calling (x has
coordinates
1
whereas its coordinates with respect to the original triangle are, of course,
(
X 1 X I X
I)
a.
},
(12.43)
= I, 2, 3),
U . I, 2, 3),
(i
pX 1 i
(12.44)
(Reference 19, p. 187; Reference 17, pp. 68, 85). The preservation of incidence
is verified as follows:
Since our coordinates are homogeneous, there are many occasions when
121
=0.
Caa- P
Any root p of this characteristic equation makes the three equations for the
x's consistent, and then we can solve any two of them to obtain the coordinates
of an invariant point.
For instance, the collineation
(12.45)
(p =I= l)
has the characteristic equation (p - 1)3 = 0. If a 1 and a 2 are not both zero,
the triple root p = l yields the range of invariant points (x1 , x 2, 0); there are
no others. By 6.24 and 6.26, this collineation is an elation with axis [0, 0, l ].
Since the equation a2 x' 1 - a1x' 2 = 0 implies a 2x 1 - a 1x 2 = 0, there is an
invariant line (other than [0, 0, l]) through the point (a1 , a 2, 0). Hence this
point is the center of the elation.
Comparing the two parts of (12.43), we see that the expression for the
homology (12.45) as a line-to-line transformation is
aX1 = X'1o
or, taking a
aX2 = X' 2 ,
(12.47)
122
COORDINATES
EXERCISES
I. Find the projective collineations that transform
(1, 0, 0)(0, I, 0)(0, 0, 1)(1, I, I}
into the following quadrangles:
(i} (I, 0, 0)(0, I, 0)(0, 0, l)(p, q, r),
(ii) (-1, I, 1)(1, -1, 1)(1, I, -1)(1, I, 1),
(iii) (0, I, 0)(0, 0, 1)(1, 0, 0)(1, I, 1),
(iv) (0, I, 0)(0, 0, 1)(1, I, 1)(1, 0, 0).
2. Give equations for the inverse of the collineation (12.43).
3. Prove Desargues's theorem as applied to the triangle of reference and
(p, I, 1)(1, q, 1)(1, I, r).
4. Prove Pappus's theorem. [Hint: Use Exercise 2 of Section 4.4, taking
A 1 A 2 A 3 as triangle of reference and B 1 = (p, I, 1), B 8 = (1, I, r).]
ll.S Polarities
Since the product of two correlations (for example, a polarity and another
projective correlation) is a collineation, any given projective correlation can
be exhibited as the product of an arbitrary polarity and a suitable projective
collineation. The most convenient polarity for this purpose is the one that
transforms each point (or line) into the line (or point) that has the same
coordinates. (This correlation is obviously projective, and of period 2.)
Combining the general projective collineation (12.43) with the polarity that
interchanges X'i and x'i we obtain the general projective correlation in the
form
(i = I, 2, 3),
(12.51)
a X 1 = c11 x\ + c11x' 8 + c31x' 8 = l: ci1x' i
(j = I, 2, 3},
where again the coefficients satisfy (12.44). Incidences are dualized in the
proper manner for a correlation, since
p{X'x'} = pl: X'ix'i = l:l: ci1x'ix1 = al: X 1x 1 = a{Xx}.
The projective correlation (12.51) is a polarity if it is equivalent to the
inverse correlation a X' 1 = l: ci1xi or (interchanging i and j)
aX'i = l: c1ix1
This means that
123
with the same af p for all i and j, so that, since the c;1 are not all zero,
cii
=; cii =
(;rc;;. (;r =
1, ;
= 1.
-c;1 and
c2a
= 0.
0
Hence a = p and C;; = C;; In other words, a projective correlation is a
polarity if and only if the matrix of coefficients c;1 is symmetric.
The nature of a polarity is such that no confusion can be caused by omitting
the prime (as in Section 7.1) and writing simply
(12.52)
(i
I, 2, 3),
where c;1 = C;; and det (c;1) = 1:1 =F 0. These equations give us the polar [X]
of a given point (x}. Solving them, we obtain the pole (x) of a given line [X]
in the form
l:ix; = l: C;;X;
(i = I, 2, 3),
where C;1 is the cofactor of C;; in the determinant d.
Two points (x) and (y) are conjugate if (x) lies on the polar [ Y] of (y).
Since Y; = l: C;JY1, the condition { Yx} = 0 or l: Y;X; = 0 becomes
(12.53)
l:l: C;;XJ'I
0,
0.
Letting (x) vary, we see that this is the equation of the polar of(y). Dually, the
condition for lines [X] and [ Y] to be conjugate, or the equation of the pole of
[ Y], is
(12.54)
[XY] = 0,
124
COORDINATES
(12.55)
This is the polarity (ABC)(Pp), where ABC is the triangle of reference, Pis
(1, 1, 1), and pis [a, b, c].
EXERCISES
1. Prove 7.21, using the triangle of reference.
2. Prove 7.13, using the polarity (12.52) and the line [0, 0, 1].
3. Prove 7.61 (Hesse's theorem), using the quadrilateral [1, 1, 1], whose
pairs of opposite vertices are ( 1, 1, 0), (0, 1, 1), ( 1, 0, 1).
4. Prove 7.31 (Chasles's theorem), using the triangle of reference and the
general polarity.
S. Triangles (0, 1, 1) (1,0, 1) (1, 1,0) and ( -1, 1, 1) (1, -1, 1) (1, 1, -1)
are perspective from (1, 1, 1) and [1, 1, 1]. For what polarity are they
polar triangles?
c11x11
C11 X11
+c
22
C88 X21
0.
ax11
+ bx22 + cx38 =
or cr1 X 11
0.
12S
We can now clarify the statement (in Section 8.1) that in some geometries
every polarity is hyperbolic, whereas other geometries admit elliptic polarities
too. The polarity (12.52) is hyperbolic or elliptic according as the equation
(xx) = 0 does or does not have a solution (other than x 1 = x 2 = x 3 = 0).
The distinction depends on the coordinate field. If this is the field of complex
numbers, every such equation can be solved; for example, the equation
x 12
+ x 22 + x 32 =
is satisfied by (1, J -1, 0). Over such a field, every polarity is hyperbolic. In
the case of the field of real numbers, on the other hand, the quadratic form
(xx) may be "definite," in which case the polarity (for instance, Xj = xj) is
elliptic. (The only solution of the above equation in real numbers is 0, 0, 0.)
Some particular equations represent conics regardless of the field. For
example, the equation
(12.61)
+ X22 + X 32 -
2X2 X 3
2X3 X 1
2X1 X 2
or
Dually, a conic inscribed in the triangle of reference is
or
(12.63)
=o
126
COORDINATES
EXERCISES
I. Prove 8.11, using the conic x 2x 3
+ x3x 1 + x 1x2 = 0.
+ 2x3x 1 =
0,
7.
If the four tangents through two exterior points are all distinct, their
points of contact and the two exterior points all lie on a conic.
8. Given a conic (xx) = 0, let (z) be any exterior point. If (zz) does not
happen to be a square, divide all the coefficients c;1 in (xx) by (zz). We now
have the same conic expressed in such a way that (zz) is a square (namely,
I). When the equation (xx) = 0 has been thus normalized, any point (y)
not on the conic is exterior or interior according as (yy) is or is not a square.
(In real geometry this means, according as (yy) is positive or negative. In
complex geometry we know already that there are no interior points because there are no elliptic involutions.) Illustrate this criterion by applying
it to the conic (12.61).
9. In real geometry all interior points of a conic are mutually accessible, but
in rational geometry the number of classes of mutually accessible points is
infinite.
127
1 = ql
q-1
+ q + 1.
For each point (x) there is, of course, a corresponding line [x]; so the number
of lines is the same.
When q is an odd prime (and not the square or higher power of such a
prime), the elements of the field are simply the residue-classes modulo q.
For instance, when q = 5, they may be denoted by the familiar symbols
0, I, 2, 3, 4,
with the usual rules for addition and multiplication except that
I+ 4
= 2 + 3 = 0,
3+4=2,
2. 3
= 4. 4 = 1,
2 4 = 3,
+ 4= 3+3=
4
+4
3 4
3. 3
=
=
=
1,
3,
2,
4.
These rules are quite natural, provided we interpret the symbols as follows:
0 means the set of all multiples of 5, in other words, all integers whose final
digit is 0 or 5; I means the residue-class that includes all the positive integers
whose final digit is I or 6, and so on. In a more familiar notation, such equations as
3+4=34=2
are "congruences"
(mod 5).
128
COORDINATES
lo = [0, 1, 2],
It= [1, 0, 0],
/2 = [0, 1, 0],
la=[1,3,1],
14 = [1, 2, 0],
15= [1, 1, 1],
16 = [2, 0, 1],
/7 [0, 1, 4],
ls = [3, 1, 2],
lo = [2, 1, 0],
Ito= [1, 0, 1],
lu = [0, 1, 1],
lt2 = [2, 3, 1],
Ita= [1, 4, 0],
114 [1, 2, 1],
115 = [3, 2, 1],
lu: = [1, 0, 2],
In= [0, 2, 1],
Its= [1, 1, 2],
lt9= [1, 1,0],
/20 = [1, 4, 1],
l:!t=[1,1,4],
/22 = [2, 1, 3],
123 = [1, 3, 2],
/24 = [4, 1, 1],
125 = [2, 1, 1],
1%6 = [ 1' 1' 3],
127 = [3, 1, 1],
12s=[1,2,3],
129 = [4, 0, 1],
lao= [0, 0, 1].
EXERCISES
1. Which points of PG(2, 5) lie on the line [1, 0, 0]?
2. Which lines pass through the point (1, I, I)?
129
I,
I,
-+
1,_1;
-+ 151+3'
(v)
= X3 X 1 ,
x11 x81 x31 = 0?
X 82
(iv)
xl + x88 - xs' = 0,
+ X3X1 + X 1X 8 = 0,
X8X 3
= 2, 4-1 = 4.]
6. What condition must the coordinate field satisfy if there exists a configuration 83 (in the notation of Section 3.2) consisting of points A, B, C, D, E,
F, G, H with the following triads collinear:
ABD, BCE, CDF, DEG, EFH, FGA, GHB, HAC?
When this condition is satisfied, the 8 points occur in 4 pairs of"opposites"
whose joins AE, BF, CG, DH are concurrent, so that the complete figure
is a (94, 12s). In the special case of the plane PG(2, 3), this (94 , 12s) is
derived from the whole plane (which is a 134) by omitting one line and the
four points that lie on it. [Hint: Take ABC as triangle of reference and
D
(1, 1, 0),
E = (0, 1, I),
H = (1, 0, w).
130
COORDINATES
yet do not meet, is resolved by regarding the affine plane as being derived from
the projective plane by omitting the special line (and all its points) while
retaining the consequent concept of parallelism. This modification of projective geometry is called affine geometry.
.o,=O
FIGURE
12.8A
(x1, x 1, 1),
which can be shortened to (x~o x 1). The two numbers x 1 and x 1 are called the
affine coordinates of the point. In other words, if x 3 =I= 0, the point (x~o x 1, xa)
of the projective plane can be regarded as the point (x1/x3 , x 1 /x3) of the
affine plane; and the equation of any locus can be made into the corresponding
equation in affine coordinates by setting x 3 = 1. In particular, the line [X]
has the equation
X1x1
+ X.x1 + X3 = 0,
and a pencil of parallel lines is obtained by fixing X1 and X1 (or, more precisely, the ratio X1 : XJ while allowing X 3 to take various values.
Let us see what has happened to the triangle of reference. Its first two sides
have become the coordinate axes, namely the x 1-axis x 1 = 0 (along which x 1
varies) and the x 1-axis x 1 = 0 (along which x 1 varies). The third side, x 3 = 0,
is the line at infinity. The first two vertices are the points at infinity on the axes:
(1, 0, 0) on the x 1-axis and (0, 1, 0) on the x 2-axis. The third vertex is the
origin (0, 0), where the two axes meet. (See Figure 12.8A.)
The homology (12.45) becomes a transformation of affine coordinates
(11.81)
x'a = /IX
131
In either case [since both (12.47) and (12.48) involve X' 1 = X 1 and X' 1 = X1 ],
every line is transformed into a parallel line; in other words, directions are
preserved. The homology leaves the origin invariant and multiplies the
coordinates of every point by f.'; we call this a central dilatation. The elation,
leaving no (proper) point invariant, is a translation (or "parallel displacement"). These two affine transformations enable us to define relative distances along one line, or along parallel lines (Reference 7, pp. 117-125); but
affine geometry provides no comparison for distances in different directions.
A conic is called a hyperbola, a parabola, or an ellipse, according as the line
at infinity is a secant, a tangent, or a nonsecant. (This agrees with the classical
definitions, since a hyperbola "goes off to infinity" in two directions, a
parabola in one direction, and an ellipse not at all.) The pole of the line at
infinity is called the center of the conic. In the case of a hyperbola, this is an
exterior point (see Section 8.1), and the two tangents that can be drawn from
it are the asymptotes, whose points of contact are at infinity. Thus
x 1x1
= I
and x11
x11
= I
is an ellipse.
To pass from affine geometry to Euclidean geometry we select, among all
the ellipses centered at the origin, a particular one, and call it the unit
circle. This provides units of measurement in all directions. To pass from
affine coordinates to Cartesian coordinates we choose, as unit circle, the ellipse
(12.83). The dilatation (12.81) transforms this into a circle of radius f.':
+ x 11 =
p 1
The translation (12.82) then yields the general circle
(12.84)
x 11
(x 1 - aS1
(x2 - a2) 2 = p 2
The rest of the story is told in every textbook on analytic geometry.
EXERCISES
I. Give equations (in affine or Cartesian coordinates) for
(i) the half-turn about the origin;
(ii) the half-turn about the point (a1 , a 2}. (See Exercise 4 of Section 6.3.)
132
COORDINATES
ot
+ x 2 cos ot,
U.9
U.91
The principle of duality still holds, also the fundamental theorem and
the basic properties of quadrangular sets. But there are no harmonic sets:
in Figure 2.5A, the points C and F coincide! A projectivity relating ranges
on two distinct lines still has an axis, but in the case of a perspectivity the axis
passes through the center. (In Figure 4.3A on page 37, EN coincides with
EO.) In contrast with 5.41, a one-dimensional projectivity is parabolic if
and only if it is an involution. But elliptic and hyperbolic projectivities of
odd period are still possible. In contrast with 6.32, every projective collineation of period 2 is an elation. As a conic is no longer a self-dual concept,
von Staudt's definition (page 72) has to be replaced by Steiner's (page 80).
Related pencils yield a conic locus, while related ranges yield a conic
envelope, which is quite different. A conic locus has a nucleus: a point that
lies on every polar and, in particular, on every tangent! For "pseudopolarity," see Reference 15, pp. 242-245.
Answers To Exercises
Section 1.1
1. (iv), (vi), (vii), (viii).
2. So that just one "ray" (from the lamp to some point on the rim) is parallel
to the wall.
3. (i) An ordinary point and a point at infinity are joined by just one line.
(ii) Each ordinary line contains just one point at infinity.
Section 1.3
2. Yes. Such apparently paradoxical behavior is characteristic of infinite sets.
Section 1.4
(i)
1)
Section 1.5
1. So that distinct points X will yield distinct lines x.
3. In both these special cases, X" coincides with X.
133
134
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
Section 1.6
p
BAC.
changed.
Section l.l
1. (i) Axioms 2.11 and 2.12 yield one point and three others.
(ii) If this statement were not true, all the points that exist would lie on a.
By Axiom 2.12, every line would contain two (in fact, three) of these
points. By Axiom 2.13, every line would coincide with a, that is, a
would be the only line, contradicting Axiom 2.11.
(iii) Let P and I be the point and line described in Axiom 2.11. If A is not
on I, I fulfills our requirement. If A is on I, Axiom 2.12 yields another
point Bon/. By Axiom 2.13, a line is equally well determined by any
distinct two of its points. The line I = AB, not containing P, is
distinct from BP. Therefore BP is a line not passing through A.
(iv) Consider the point A. By Axiom 2.12, the line whose existence is
proved in (iii) contains three distinct points, each of which (by Axiom
2.13) can be joined to A by a line. The three lines so obtained are
distinct; for, if two of them, AB and AC, were coincident, the same
line could be called BC, contradicting the fact that BC does not pass
through A.
2. In the notation of Figure 5.1A,
AECF ~ SRCU ~ BDCF.
This projectivity AECF 7i BDCF has C and F as invariant points. By
Axiom 2.18, it has no other invariant point.
3. 2.17.
Section l.l
1. (i) By 2.24, there exists a quadrangle PQRS having 6 distinct sides
p = PQ, q = PS, r = RS, s = QR, u = QS, w = PR.
The first 4 of these 6 lines form a quadrilateral pqrs having 6 distinct
vertices
P = p q, Q = p s, R = r s, S = q r, U = q s, W = p r
(Reference 8, pp. 231-232).
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
lJS
u = QS, v = UW, w = PR
are concurrent, it follows that the point u w lies on v, contradicting
Axiom 2.17 (which tells that the diagonal points
U = q s, V = u w, W = p r
of the quadrangle PQRS are not collinear).
Section 2.3
1. We have 0
= PP' QQ';
136
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
Section 3.1
2. Certain pairs of triangles are perspective from points P, Q, R, S, and consequently also from lines p, q, r, s. For instance, ABC and SRQ are perspective from P.
Section 3.1
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
ABC
EDC
BDF
137
BCA.
I. Any point K of the harmonic net R(ABC) (or of the harmonic sequence
ABC . .. ) is derived from ABC by a finite sequence of harmonic constructions, each of which is carried over by the projectivity ABC ;; A'B'C'.
Hence K is transformed into a corresponding point K' of the harmonic net
R(A'B'C') (or of the harmonic sequence A'B'C' .. .).
2. These three points
Q = PC A 1A, C2 = CS AB,
SA 1 BP
Q
are collinear, since H(RS, CC2), H(RB, P D), and RSC 1\ RBP.
3. A projectivity relating pencils through two distinct points is a perspectivity
if and only if it has an invariant line.
4. Use 4.21.
Section 4.3
Every projectivity relating pencils through two distinct points determines
another special point, the "center," which lies on the join of the crossintersections of any two pairs of corresponding lines.
Section 4.4
I.
al
bl
A a Al
Bt Ba
cl
a2
ba
Cz
aa
ba
Ca
Az
Bz
Az
Ba
cl
A a Al
B2 Bt
cl cl
At
Bz
Az
Bl
Aa
Ba
Cz Cz Cz
Ca Ca Ca
138
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
7. 8
801,
702,
504,
234,
468,
567,
135,
837,
261.
678,
357,
615,
321,
642,
384.
Section 5.1
Q
1. ADBF 7e AVSP
R
1\
ADCE.
3. The line joining the centers of the two perspectivities would inevitably
yield an invariant point (such as Fin Figure 5.1A, or C in Figure 5.18).
4. Our axioms (not being categorical) provide no answer to this question.
In real geometry, the projectivity ABC i\ BCA (Exercise 2 of Section 4.1)
provides an instance of an elliptic projectivity. But in complex geometry
every projectivity is either hyperbolic or parabolic (because every quadratic equation can be solved).
ANSWERS TOEXERCJSES
139
Section 5.2
The parabolic projectivity becomes a translation, shifting every point along
the line through the same distance AA'. The point at infinity, C, is evidently
the only invariant point.
Section 5.3
1. This is merely 5.34 in a more symmetrical notation. The remarks about
Desargues at the beginning of Section 5.3 suggest an analogous theorem
concerning six numbers a, b, c, d, e,f(which we may think of as distances
of the points from an arbitrary "origin"):
If a + b
+e
and b
+ c = e +f,
then c
+ d = f + a.
2. The product leaves both M and N invariant, and transforms A into A'.
3. Watch what happens to A, A', B.
4. Let A be any noninvariant point. The given projectivity, not being an
involution, can be expressed as
AA'A" i\ A'A"A"',
where the three points on either side are all distinct. (Conceivably A"'
coincides with A, and then the second involution, like the first, is expressed
in terms of one of its invariant points.)
5. The symbols (AB')(BA) and (AB)(BA') are meaningless. However, the
projectivity ABC 7i. ABC' is the product of (AB)(CC) and (AB)(CC').
Section 5.4
I. The given statement says that C and D are the invariant points of an
involution that interchanges A and B.
2. If H(AB, MN), the fundamental theorem serves to identify the hyperbolic
projectivity AMN 7i BMN with the involution (MM)(NN).
3. The involution (MM)(NN)has the effect AB'MN 7i BA'MN, which shows
that MN is a pair of the involution (AA')(BB').
4. A'E'C'F' 7i AECF 7i BDCF 7i B'D'C'F'.
5. Since the involution ABCD 7i BAED has CE for one of its pairs, its
invariant points are D and D'. Therefore H(AB, DD').
6. The hint shows that the projectivity X 7i X' has only one invariant point,
namely B.
140
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
7. By 4.21, there is a projectivity BCAD 7i ACBE. Since A and Bare interchanged, 5.31 shows that this projectivity is an involution. Since C is
one invariant point, 5.41 shows that F is the other. Since DE is a pair
of this involution, H(DE, CF). By 4.21 again, there is a projectivity
ABCF 7i DEFC. By 5.31 again, this is an involution. By 5.33, it follows
that (AD} (BE} (CF}.
Section 6.1
(i) This is a collineation of period 2, transforming the side PQ into itself
according to the hyperbolic involution (PQ)(UU), where U = PQ RS.
On the opposite side RS, every point is invariant.
(ii) This is a collineation of period 3, transforming the trilinear polar of S
into itself according to the projectivity DEF 7i EFD.
(iii) This is a collineation of period 4, leaving invariant the point PR QS
and the line (QR PS)(PQ RS).
Section 6.%
1. The center is PP' Q Q' and the axis joins D to PQ P' Q'.
2. Hyperbolic or parabolic, according as the collineation is a homology or an
elation.
3. Since ABOO 7i A'B'OO, we have (AB')(A'B)(OO}.
4. Clearly, each point on the axis o is invariant. If any other point A were
invariant too, the first elation would take A to some different point A', and
the second would take A' back to A: the two elations would be [o; A -+ A')
and [o; A'-+ A], whose product is the identity. Apart from this trivial
case, the product can only be an elation (not a homology). In fact,
[o; A -+B][o; B-+ C] = [o; A-+ C).
Alternatively, the dual result can be proved as follows: If two elations have
the same center 0, they induce parabolic projectivities on any given line
through 0. By 5.21, their product, inducing another parabolic projectivity
on this line, must itself be an elation (if it is not merely the identity).
5. Let A and B be the centers of two such elations, ot and {J, which transform
Pinto p and Pfl. If A and Bare distinct, and Pis any point not on the
axis AB, the point APfl BP is both pfl and ptJrz; therefore ot{J = {Jot. If
A and B coincide, let y be an elation having a different center (but the
same axis), so that ot commutes with both y and {Jy. Then ot{Jy = {Jyot =
{Joty; therefore ot{J = {Jot.
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
141
142
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
reflection in a line is a harmonic homology having the line as axis while its
center is at infinity in the perpendicular direction.
Section 6.4
Each diagonal point of the quadrangle is determined by two opposite sides,
and these are transformed into two opposite vertices of the quadrilateral.
Section 7.1
1. A self-conjugate line contains its pole. By 7.11, it cannot contain any other
self-conjugate point.
2. Y= xb.
4. r BC and s BC.
S. No; a trilinear polarity is not a correlation, as it transforms collinear
points into non-concurrent lines. Moreover, it is not a one-to-one correspondence, as it transforms any point on a side of the triangle into that side
itself.
Section 7.1
1. Such a correlation induces on g the involution DEF 7i. ABC. Thus we can
apply 7.21 to the triangle SAD (or SBE, or SCF).
2. Since P and p are self-conjugate, 7.II shows that Q may be any other point
on p (but not on a side of the triangle ABC). For instance, we may take
Q = p (a AP)(b BP),
Section 7.3
1. The pole of the line (p QR)(q RP) is the point P(q r) Q(r p).
2. The polarity is (ABC)(Pp), where C =a b.
Section 7.4
Section 7.5
1. Each vertex is the pole of the opposite side.
2. Use Exercise 1 of Section 7.4, with b, AP, BP, a replaced by q, r, s, t.
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
143
Section 7.6
Apply the dual of Hesse's theorem to the quadrangle RSUV, in which RS = p
is conjugate to UV(through P) and RV = tis conjugate to SU(through
n.
Section 7.7
I. Yes. In the notation of Section 6.1, Exercise (iii), the projective collineation
PQRS-+- QRSP interchanges PQ RS and QR SP.
and
(ABC)(P'p),
8. The line CD, joining the midpoint of the chord PQ to the pole of the line
PQ, is a diameter. Its two intersections with the parabola are the center
(at infinity) and S.
Section 8.1
1. By 8.21, QR meets SPin a point conjugate to B. But the only such point on
QR is A.
144
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
2. Let AP meet the conic again in S. Then the diagonal triangle of the quadrangle PQRS has the desired properties.
3. Let BQ and BR meet the conic again in Sand P, respectively. By Exercise
l, A and Bare two of the diagonal points of the quadrangle PQRS. The
third diagonal point C lies on the side PQ, as in Figure 8.2A.
4. Let C and ABbe the center and axis of such a homology. In the notation
of Figure 8.2A, H(CC1 , PQ). Since every secant PQ through C meets AB
in the harmonic conjugate of C, the homology interchanges P and Q.
q C(p r).
4. LetP, Q, R be three points on the first conic, andP', Q', R' (orp',q', r') the
corresponding points (or tangents) of the second. Let D be the pole of PQ
for the first conic, D' the pole of P' Q' for the second (and d' the polar of
p' q'). In view of Exercises 2 and 3, we merely have to relate the quadrangle
PQRD by a projective collineation (or correlation) to the quadrangle
P' Q' R' D' (or to the quadrilateral p'q'r'd').
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
145
1. Lets = DE be the variable line through 0. After using the hint, we observe
that, by 8.5 I with x = PA and y = QB, the locus of S = x y is a conic
through P, Q, R.
2. Definingy = QX, we have x 7i X 7i y. But PQ is an invariant line of the
projectivity x 7i y. Hence x 7\ y, and the locus is a line.
3. The line joins the points of contact of the remaining tangents from P and Q.
7i M
= x y
QL,
7\ L 7i y.
is a conic.
Section 9.1
1. AB, p, q are three tangents; P, Q are the points of contact of the last two.
Each point Z on PQ yields another tangent XY.
2. If EA, AB, BC, CD, DE are the five tangents, the point of contact of the
last lies on the line B(AD CE).
3. A parabola (since Xao Y"" is the line at infinity).
Section 9.2
1. Dualizing Exercise 2 of Section 9.1, we see that the tangent at P to the conic
PQRST joins P to the point
3. !5! = 60.
4. KPQVON (or KNOVQP).
5. Consider the dissection of the two triangles RAP and RCQ (Figure ll.lA)
into three quadrilaterals (each) by means of the perpendiculars x, y, z
from M to RA, AP, PR; and x', y', z' from N to RC, CQ, QR. (The same
symbols will serve for the segments and their lengths.) Comparison of
146
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
angles shows that the quadrilateral Axy is directly similar to Cy' x', and Pyz
to Qz'y'. Therefore
X
y'
y
z'
xx' = yy' = zz',
-=-,
-=-,
z
y'
y x'
and
x
z'
-=z x'
Hence the quadrilateral Rxz is directly similar to Rz'x', and the diagonal
MR of the former is along the same line as the diagonal RN of the latter.
(See also H. G. Forder, Higher Course Geometry, Cambridge University
Press, 1949, p. 13.)
Section 9.3
1. The desired point lies on the line
T[QR (PQ ST)(g RS)].
2. Of the conics through P, Q, R, S (Figure 9.3A), any one that touches g
does so at an invariant point of Desargues's involution.
3. In this case, A is an invariant point of Desargues's involution. Yes,
TEAU 7i. TABU 7i. UBAT.
4. Since t is a tangent, Desargues's involution on it is hyperbolic. Another
conic arises from the second invariant point.
Section 9.4
1.
~(~) =
10.
2. This follows from 9.41 along with the latter half of 9.42.
3. Let PQR (Figure 9.4A) be the given triangle, and ST any secant of the
former conic that is a tangent of the latter. Let the remaining tangents
from S and T meet in U. By the dual of Exercise 2, U lies on the conic
PQRST.
4. PQRS and PQRT are two quadrangles inscribed in the conic PQRST. By
8.21, their diagonal triangles, ABC and A'B'C', are self-polar. By 9.42, the
six vertices of these two triangles lie on a conic.
Section 9.5
1. With respect to a degenerate conic consisting of two lines a and b, the
polar of a general point Pis the harmonic conjugate of(a b)P with respect
to a and b; the polar of a general point on a is a itself; the polar of a b is
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
147
= q2 + q + 1,
= q + I.
Section 10.2.
2.
12
11
10
1
2
2
3
5
3
4
6
12
4
5
7
0
5
6
8
1
6
7
7
8
10
3
8 9 10 11 12
9 10 11 12 0
11 12 0 1 2
4 5 6 7 8
4
10 11
9
2
0
0
1
3
9
Section 10.3
r 6 5 4 3 2
1.
1 2 3 4 5 6 0
s 2 3 4 5 6 0 I
4 5 6 0 I 2 3
The diagonal points of the quadrangle P2P4P5P8 are the three p.oints on /0
Section 10.4
I. 24; 9; 3. If A, B, C, D are the four points on a line, the three elliptic
involutions are
(CA)(BD),
(AB)(CD).
(BC)(AD),
2. By considering the possible effect of a given involution on three distinct
points A, B, C, we see that there are q involutions (AA)(BX), where
X=;6A, q-1 involutions (AB)(CY), where Y=;6A and Y=;6B, and
(q- 1)2 involutions (AY)(BZ), where Z :;6 A and Z :;6 Y: altogether
q + (q _ I) + (q _ 1)2 = q2
involutions. The number of hyperbolic involutions, such as (AA)(BB), is
obviously ( q
are elliptic.
148
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
Section 10.5
1. I, -161+3 In fact, if r + s
2.
3. q + 1; q + 2.
Section 10.6
1. Since this collineation has period 3, Figure 7. 7B must be modified so that
I"'= I and therefore C = B", C' =B. Choosing A= P10 and I= 12 , we
obtain the polarities
16 (6)
, 3
20 3875. 16
'
20
= 3100.
4. 234. In PG(2, 3), any 5 points include 3 that are collinear; thus 9.21 holds
vacuously. In Section 9.5 we saw that any 5 points, no 4 collinear, determine a conic (possibly degenerate). This result remains significant in
PG(2, 3), but the conic is necessarily degenerate.
5. Yes. The polarity Pr+-+ lr determines the conic P0 P7P8P11 which, regarded
as a quadrangle, has the diagonal triangle P4P1oPu. The sides of this triangle (namely, 14 , 110, 11s) are nonsecants: the points on them are just all
the points in the plane except those that form the conic.
6. Let C be any point on the polar of P. Then CP is a pair of conjugate points
and H(CP, PP); therefore P is accessible from itself. Since the relation
H(CC1 , PQ) implies H(CC1 , QP), accessibility is symmetric. To prove that
accessibility is transitive, let R be accessible from Q on one line and from
P on another, so that H(AA1 , QR) and H(BB1, RP), where AA 1 and BB1
are suitable pairs of conjugate points. By Exercise 2 of Section 3.3, P and Q
are harmonic conjugates with respect to the two points
= AB1 BA1
and
C1
AB A1B1
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
149
7. Let Q be accessible from P; that is, let H(ee1, PQ), where ee1 is a suitable
pair of conjugate points. The harmonic homology with center e and axis
the polar c (through e1) interchanges P and Q while transforming the conic
into itself (by Exercise 4 of Section 8.2). Since any tangent through P or Q
is transformed into a tangent through Q or P, two mutually accessible
points are always of the same type: both on the conic, or both exterior, or
both interior. By 8.11, any two points on the conic are mutually accessible.
By Exercise I of Section 8.1, any two exterior points on a tangent are
mutually accessible. Let P and Q be any two exterior points whose join is
not a tangent, and let either of the tangents from P meet either of the tangents from Q in R. Since R is accessible from both P and Q, Exercise 6
shows that P and Q are accessible from each other. Thus the three answers
are:
(i) all the points on the conic,
(ii} all the exterior points,
(iii) a set of interior points (possibly all, as we shall see in Section 12.6,
Exercise 9, and Section 12.7, Exercise 7).
8. (i) On a given line through P, there are (q + I )/2 points accessible from P:
one for each pair of conjugate points on the line. (Two such pairs could
not both yield the same point Q; for then the involution of pairs of
conjugate points could be described as (PP)(QQ), whereas we know
that it is elliptic.)
(ii) On each of the q + I Jines through P, there are (q + 1)/2 points
accessible from P, namely P itself and (q- 1)/2 others. Hence the
total number of points accessible from P is
I + (q + l)(q- 1)/2 = (q2 + 1)/2.
9. We use reductio ad absurdum. Suppose, if possible, that an elliptic polarity
exists. By Exercise 6, accessibility is an "equivalence relation" (G. Birkhoff
and S. MacLane, A Survey of Modern Algebra, 2nd ed., Macmillan, New
York, 1953, pp. 155-156). Therefore the q2 + q + I points in PG(2, q) can
be distributed into a certain number of classes, each consisting of(q2 + 1)/2
mutually accessible points. Dividing q2 + q + I by (q2 + 1)/2 (and
remembering that q is an odd number, greater than 1}, we obtain the
quotient 2 and a remainder q, which is absurd.
Section 11.1
1. X coincides with P.
2. See Exercise 5 of Section 9.2.
Section ll.l
The range and the axial pencil; the flat pencil.
150
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
Section 11.3
(i) No. (ii) No. (iii) Yes.
Section 11.4
Yes.
Section 11.5
If two axial pencils belong to a bundle, they have a common plane.
Section 11.6
(2.14) If AB and CD are either intersecting or parallel, then AC and BD are
either intersecting or parallel.
(2.16) If two planes are parallel, their common points form a line at infinity.
Section 11.7
The sphere on PQ as diameter.
Section ll.l
When the triad (x1 , x 2, x3) is interpreted as a point in affine space, represented
by Cartesian coordinates, the equivalent triads all lie on a line through the
origin, and the equation {Xx} = 0 represents a plane through the origin.
When we pass from affine space to the projective plane, it is thus natural
to use x1 , x 2, x3 as homogeneous coordinates for a point, and to regard
{Xx} = 0 as the equation for a line.
Section ll.l
1. (0, I, -1), (-1,0, 1), (1, -1,0).
2. Yes, they all pass through (I, -I, I).
3. [I, I, -2]; (0, 2, 1).
4. (0, x 2, x 3).
5. (-1, 1, 1), (1, -I, I), (I, I, -1).
6. The condition for (p.y
p. = -{Xz}/{Xy}.
+ z)
7. AS = [0, x3 , -x2 ], , AD
P = (-x1 , x 2, x3), , D
S = (1/x1 , 1/x2, 1/x3 ).
8.
= [0, x3, x2 ], ,
= (0, x 2, -x3), ,
+ {Xz} =
0, or
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
1S1
Section ll.3
p,., = 0.
6. In the notation of Exercise 4, the relation between p and p' may be expressed in the form
ypp' - otp + 6p' - p = 0
(ot6 = py).
(i) This is an involution if p and p' are interchangeable, that is if -ot = 6.
In other words, the general involution is given by
+ b(p + p') + c =
0
(b 8 = ac).
(ii) Any invariant point is given by a root of the quadratic equation
yp 8 - (- 6)p- p = 0; therefore the projectivity is parabolic if
app'
( ot - 6) + 4Py = o.
7. This is simply a restatement of the above "algebraic version of the fundamental theorem." In particular, the cross ratio of a harmonic set is -I.
8. Since [ Y] passes through (y + z), and [Z] through (py + z), we have
{ Yy} + {Yz} = 0,
p{Zy} + {Zz} = 0,
and the given expression reduces at once to p.
152
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
9. Taking (y), (z), [ Y], [Z] to be (a, I, 0), (b, I, 0), [I, -c, 0], [I, -d, 0],
we have
{yY}{zZ} =(a - c)(b- d)
{yZ}{zY}
(a - d)(b- c)
Section 12.4
1.
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
x'1
x' 1
x'1
x'1
x3
2.
or, solving the former set of equations in terms of C;;, the cofactor of c0
in the determinant 12.44,
3. Corresponding sides of the two triangles meet in the three points
(0, q - I, I - r),
(I - p, 0, r - 1),
(p - I, I - q, 0),
which are collinear by the criterion 12.21 or, still more simply, by addition.
4. The lines A1B1 and A3 B2 meet in C1 =(I, I, 1). Therefore B3 is (1, q, I) for
a suitable value of q. The three lines A3 B1 , A1B3 , A2B2, having equations
A 2 B~o
all pass through the same point C 3 if qpr = I. These two conditions agree,
since pq = qp. (The connection between Pappus's theorem and the commutative law of multiplication is one of the many important discoveries of
David Hilbert, 1862-1943.)
Section 12.5
1. If the correlation 12.51 transforms (1, 0, 0) into [1, 0, 0], (0, I, 0) into
[0, I, 0], and (0, 0, I) into [0, 0, 1], we must have C;; = 0 whenever i =I= j.
Therefore c;; = C;;. and the correlation is a polarity.
2. Setting [X] = [ Y] = [0, 0, I) in 12.54, we see that the condition for this
line to be self-conjugate is C 33
0, or
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
153
0.
By Exercise 6(i) of Section 12.3, this relation between I" and I'' represents
an involution provided c122 =F c11c22
3. Setting I" = 1 and I'' = -1 in the above solution of Exercise 2, we see
that the condition for the opposite vertices ( 1, I, 0) to be conjugate is
Cn
C22
Similarly, if (0, I, I) are conjugate, c22 = c33 Hence c11 = c33, and this
makes( 1, 0, I) conjugate.
4. The polars [cw c21, c31 ], [c12 , c22, c32], [c13, c23 , c33 ] of the vertices meet the
respectively opposite sides [1, 0, 0], [0, 1, 0), [0, 0, 1] in the collinear points
5. lnvectornotation, (1, 1, 1)
and
they are polar triangles for the "natural" polarity X, = x, which transforms
each point (or line) into the line (or point) that has the same coordinates.
This is the algebraic counterpart of Section 7.8. The remaining points
and lines of the Desargues configuration are ( 0, 1, -1 ) , ( -1, 0, 1 ) ,
(1, -1, 0), and [0, 1, -1], [-1, 0, 1], [1, -1, 0]. (Reference 8b, p. 106.)
6. The point (y) is accessible from (z) if and only if there exists a number I"
such that the harmonic conjugates (y #Z) are conjugate for the polarity.
Replacing x andy in the expression (xy) by y + #Z andy - #Z, we see that
the desired condition for conjugacy is (yy) -p.(yz) +p.(zy) -p.2 (zz) =0,
that is,
(yy)
!" 2(zz)
J54
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
+ 2c31x 3x 1 = 0
= Xz2
XsX1.
x 22
x 3 x 1
5. Let PQR be the triangle of reference, and 0 the unit point (1, I, 1). The
point (x1, x 2, x 3) whose locus we seek is the trilinear pole of the line
[x1- 1, x 2- 1, x 3- 1], which passes through 0 if
x1-1
+ Xz-1 + xa--1 =
0.
+ (xy) =
0,
p,(xy)
+ (yy) = 0.
= 0,
which is the combined equation of the two tangents that pass through (y).
Dually, if [ Y] is a secant PQ of the conic [XX] = 0,
[XX][YY]- [XY] 2 = 0
= 0
evidently passes through all these six points. Dually, two secants [ Y], [Z],
and the tangents at their four "ends," all touch the conic
[XX][YZ]- [XY][XZ]
0.
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
ISS
8. By Exercise 7(ii) at the end of Chapter 10, a point {y) is exterior if and only
if it is accessible from (z). By Exercise 6 of Section 12.5, this condition
means that (yy), like (zz), is a nonzero square.
The conic 12.61 has tangents x1 = x3 and x 2 = x3 , meeting in the point
(1, 1, 1), for which (zz) = l. Therefore {y) is exterior or interior according
as y 12 + yl - y32 is a nonzero square or a nonsquare.
9. In the field of real numbers, the product of any two negative numbers is
positive. But in the field of rational numbers, the product of two nonsquares is not necessarily a square. To obtain an infinity of mutually
inaccessible points, we can take (xx) = x 12 + x.J- x 32 and choose
points {y) for which the values of (yy) run through the sequence of primes.
Section 11.7
1. (0, 0, 1), (0, 1, 0), (0, 1, 1), (0, 1, 4}, (0, 2, 1), (0, 1, 2).
2. [4, 0, 1], [1, 4, 0], [1, 3, 1), [1, 1, 3), [3, 1, 1], [0, 1, 4].
3. (i) Since this collineation has the effect
(1, 0, 0) ... (0,
1,
0),
[1, 0, 0] ... [ 0, 1,
2],
1),
[0, 1, 0] ... [ 1, 0,
0],
1,
2),
0, -2),
0],
x't =x2,
x'2 = Xt - 2xs + Xa,
x'a = Xs +2xa,
X't = X2 + 2Xa,
X'2=Xt.
X'a = 2Xt- 2Xa.
= 4.)
(0, 1, 0) ... ( 1,
(0, 0, 1) ... ( 2,
(1, 1, 1) ... ( 2,
0,
2,
1),
1,
1),
1),
2],
[0, 1, 0] ... [-1, 1, 0],
[0, 0, 1] ... [-1, 0, 1],
[1, 1, 1] ... [ 1, 2, -2];
X't = -2X1- X2- Xa,
X'2=X1 +X2,
X'a= 2Xt +Xa.
156
5.
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
ANSWERS TO EXERCISES
(I,
(0,
(0,
(0,
(0,
0,
1,
0,
0,
1,
2),
1),
1),
1),
1),
(0,
(0,
(1,
(0,
(1,
2, 1),
l, 4),
0, 0),
l, 0),
1, 0),
0, l),
1, 0),
1, 3),
2, 1),
1, 4),
6. The field must admit an element whose square is -3; for instance, such a
configuration exists in the complex plane but not in the real plane, in
PG(2, pk) if and only if p is a prime congruent to 1 or 3 modulo 6.
Following the hint, we obtain F = CD EH, G = BH DE. The collinearity of FGA makes
w2
+w + 1=
0.
The joins of "opposite" points all pass through ( -w, l, 1). In the case of
PG(2, 3), we have w = I, and the (94 , 123) uses up all the points except
(0, l, 2),
(2, 0, 1),
(1, 2, 0)
and
(1, l, 1),
1. (i) x'1 = -x1, x'2 = -x2 (as in 12.81 with f.'= -1).
(ii) x'1 = 2a1 - x 1, x'2 = 2a2 - x 2
2. A rotation about the origin.
3. (i) x' 1 =xi,
(ii) x'1 = x 2 ,
x' 2 = -x2
x'2 = x 1
References
158
REFERENCES
I,
Blaisdell Publishing
20. B. L. van der Waerden, Einfiihrung in die algebraische Geometrie, Dover Publications, New York, 1945.
21. - - - Science Awakening, Oxford University Press, New York, 1961.
22. A. N. Whitehead, The Aims of Education and Other Essays, Williams and Norgate, London, 1929.
23. I. M. Yaglom, Geometric Transformations, Vol.
1973.
111,
Index
[References are to pages; principal references are in boldface.]
Canonical form:
for a conic, 125
for a polarity, 123
Cartesian coordinates, 131, ISO
Categoricalness, 31, 118
CAYLEY, ARTHUR,
L. B., 3
AL-DHAHIR, M. W., vi
Alias and Alibi, 120
Analytic geometry, 111-132
Anharmonic ratio, see Cross ratio
APOLLO, 71
APOLLONWS OF PERGA, 3, 33,
ARCHIMEDES OF SYRACUSE, 3
ARCHYTAS, 71
43, 71
s.,
101
E. T., I, 24
85, 102
BRUNELLESCHI, FILIPPO,
BUSSEY, W.
H., 91
Butterfly theorem, 78
Center:
of a conic, 74, 131
of gravity, 112
of a perspective collineation, 53
of a perspectivity, 10, 18
Central dilatation, 131, 141
projection, 3, 104
Cevian, 29
Characteristic equation, 121
CHASLES, MICHEL,
49, 60, 64
138
Concurrent lines, 2
Cone, 86
Configuration, 26, 92, 129
of Desargues, 27, 52
of Pappus, 38-40
Conic, 3, 72-90, 99-103, 124-126
through five points, 85
touching five lines, 82
Conjugate diameters, 74
lines, 60, 72, 123
points, 60, 72, 123
Consistency, 95
Construction:
for a conic, 83
for a harmonic conjugate, 22
for an involution, 46
for the polar of a point, 65, 75
for a projectivity, 33-34
159
160
INDEX
Construction (continued)
for the sixth point of a quadrangular
set, 20-21
for a tangent, 76
Continuity, 31, 77
COOLIDGE, J. L., 41, 60, 71, 81
Coordinate axes, 130
transformation, 120
Coordinates, Ill , 113
Coplanar (points or lines), 2
Correlation, 49, 57, 98
Correspondence, 6
CouRANT, RICHARD, 1
Criss-cross theorem, 37
Cross ratio, 118-119
Equation:
of a conic, 124-125
of a line, 113
of a point, 113
Equilateral triangle, 16, 103
Erlangen, 41
EUCLID OF ALEXANDRIA, 1, 3, 104
Euclidean geometry, 23, 74, 102-103,
87, 146
Desargues's two-triangle theorem, 19,
EDGE, W. L., 97
Elation, 53, 98, 121, 140
Electro-magnetic theory of light,
91
Elementary correspondence, 8
Elements of EucLID, I
Ellipse, 3, 42, 131
Elliptic involution, 47
line, see Nonsecant
point, see Interior point
polarity, 72, 100, 101
projectivity, 41, 43
Envelope, 72, 83
coordinates, 113
INDEX
71
History, 2-4, 24, 71, 102
Homogeneous coordinates, 112, I 50
Homography, 118
Homology, 53, 98, 121
Hyperbola, 3, 42, 74, 131
Hyperbolic involution, 47, 118
line, see Secant
point, see Exterior point
polarity, 72, 98
projectivity, 41, 43
Ideal elements, 108-109
Identity, 41
Incidence, 5, 94, 113
Interior point, 73, 101, 126
Intersection, 5
Invariant line, 50, 53
Invariant point, ll, 50, 54
Inverse correspondence, 9
Involution, 45, 97, 118, 147
of conjugate points, 62, 64, 73, 99
of Desargues, 87
Involutory collineation, 55
Involutory correlation, see Polarity
Join, 5
KEPLER, JOHANN, 3, 71,
KLEIN, FELIX, 4, 102
LEHMER, D. N.,
LEJBNIZ, G.
LEVI, F. W., 40
LIE, SoPHUS, 53
109
w., 85
Line, 2, 112
Line at infinity, 3, 109
Line coordinates, 113
Linear fractional transformation, 118
Linear homogeneous transformation,ll9
LOCKWOOD, E. H., 43
Locus, 72, 80, 85
MACLANE, SAUNDERS, 149
MACLAURIN, COLIN, 85, 102
MASCHERONI, LORENZO, 1
161
MATHEWS, G. B., 12
Medians of a triangle, 103, 136
MENAECHMUS, 3, 71
Midpoint, 23, 74
MOBIUS, A. F., 4, 49, 112
Model, 104-108
MOHR, GEORG, I
162
INDEX
Point, 2, 112
Point at infinity, 3, 109
Point of contact, 72
Polar, 60
Polar triangle, 64
Polarity, 60, 98, 110, 122-124
Pole, 60, 72
PONCELET, J. V., 3, 10, 12, %4, 29, 49,
53, 71, 109
Primitive concepts, 6, 14
Principle of duality, 4, 10, 25
Product:
of elations, 55
of elementary correspondence, 10
of harmonic homologies, 56
of involutions, 47
of polarities, 68-70
Projection, 1, 3, 104
Projective collineation, 50, 98, 119-122
correlation, 57, 98, 122
geometry, 2, 3, 91, 102, 104
Projectivity, 9
on a line, 10, 34, 41-48, 97, 118
relating two ranges or pencils, 9
Pure geometry, 111
Q(ABC, DEF), 20
Quadrangle, 7, 51, 58, 87, 95
Quadrangular involution, 46, 64, 70
Quadrangular set of points, 10-22, 46,
96
Quadratic form, 124-125
Quadrilateral, 7, 27, 51,58
viii
Right angle, 110
Section:
of a cone, 86
of a pencil, 8
SEGRE, BENIAMINO, 100, 112, 126
Self-conjugate line, 60
Self-conjugate point, 60
Self-duality, 25, 26, 39, lOS
Self-polar pentagon, 67,70
triangle, 61-63, 88, 99
SERRET, J. A., 97
SEYDEWITZ, FRANZ, 76-77
Shadow, 3, 104
Side, 7
SINGER, JAMES, 92
SMOGORZHEVSKii, A. S., 1
STAUDT, K. G c. VON, 4, 12, 29, 41,
45, 67, 71-72, 80, 102
STEINER, JACOB, 77, 80, 89, 99
STRUIK, D. J., 102, 120
Symmetric matrix, 123
Symmetry of the harmonic relation, 29
SYNGE, J. L., s
vi
VEBLEN, OsWALD,
VoN STAUDT,
see
STAUDT
RIGBY, JoHN,
Secant, 72, 99
Introduction to Geometry
Wiley, New York
Non-Euclidean Geometry
University of Toronto Press
Regular Polytopes
Dover, New York
Geometry Revisited
Mathematical Association of America, Washington, D.C.
(with W. 0. J. Moser)
Generators and Relations for Discrete Groups
Springer, Berlin
(with R. Frucht and D. L. Powers)
Zero-Symmetric Graphs
Academic Press, New York