Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Zero system

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
Jump to: navigation, search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.


null system

An involutory correlation of an $ n $-dimensional projective space with an anti-symmetric operator. Suppose that the null system has the form

$$ {} ^ \prime u = Ax . $$

Then the scalar product $ {} ^ \prime ux $, which is

$$ ( x, Ax) = -( x,Ax), $$

vanishes.

References

[1] B.A. Rozenfel'd, "Multi-dimensional spaces" , Moscow (1966) (In Russian)

Comments

A null system is also called null polarity, a symplectic polarity or a symplectic correlation. As is clear from the above, it is a polarity such that every point lies in its own polar hyperplane.

In projective $ 3 $-space, a correlation is a dualizing transformation (cf. Correlation), taking points, lines and planes into planes, lines and points, while preserving incidence in accordance with the principle of duality. If every range of points on a line is transformed into a projectively related pencil of planes through the new line, the correlation is said to be projective. There is a unique projective correlation transforming five given points, no four in a plane, into five given planes, no four through a point.

A polarity is a projective correlation of period two (cf. Polarity). In other words, it transforms each point $ A $ into a plane $ \alpha $ and each point of $ \alpha $ into a plane through $ A $. One kind of polarity transforms each point on a quadric surface into the tangent plane at that point. Another kind, a null polarity, transforms every point of space into a plane through that point. It may be described as the unique projective correlation that transforms five points $ A, B, C, D, E $ (no four collinear) into the respective planes $ EAB , ABC, BCD , CDE , DEA $. The line $ AB $ is self-polar, since it is the line of intersection of the polar planes $ EAB $ and $ ABC $ of $ A $ and $ B $. In fact, all the lines through $ A $ in its polar plane $ EAB $ are self-polar: there is a flat pencil of such lines in every plane, and the set of all self-polar lines is a linear complex.

In terms of projective coordinates, a null polarity takes each point $ ( x _ {0} , x _ {1} , x _ {2} , x _ {3} ) $ to the plane $ [ X _ {0} , X _ {1} , X _ {2} , X _ {3} ] $, where

$$ X _ \mu = \sum _ {\nu = 0 } ^ { 3 } c _ {\mu \nu } x _ \nu $$

and $ c _ {\mu \nu } + c _ {\nu \mu } = 0 $ and $ c _ {01} c _ {23} + c _ {02} c _ {31} + c _ {03} c _ {12} \neq 0 $. In terms of the Plücker coordinates of a line, $ \{ p _ {01} , p _ {02} , p _ {03} , p _ {23} , p _ {31} , p _ {12} \} $, where

$$ p _ {\mu \nu } + p _ {\nu \mu } = 0 \ \ \textrm{ and } \ \ p _ {01} p _ {23} + p _ {02} p _ {31} + p _ {03} p _ {12} = 0 , $$

the linear complex of self-polar lines in the null polarity has the equation

$$ \sum \sum c _ {\mu \nu } p _ {\mu \nu } = 0. $$

References

[a1] K.G.C. von Staudt, "Beiträge zur Geometrie der Lage" , Korn , Nürnberg (1847) pp. 60–69; 190–196
[a2] H.S.M. Coxeter, "Non-Euclidean geometry" , Univ. Toronto Press (1965) pp. 65–70
[a3] D. Pedoe, "Geometry: a comprehensive course" , Dover, reprint (1988) pp. §85.5
How to Cite This Entry:
Zero system. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Zero_system&oldid=52442
This article was adapted from an original article by D.D. Sokolov (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article