In mathematics, a Laguerre plane is one of the three types of Benz plane, which are the Möbius plane, Laguerre plane and Minkowski plane. Laguerre planes are named after the French mathematician Edmond Nicolas Laguerre.

classical Laguerre plane: 2d/3d-model

The classical Laguerre plane is an incidence structure that describes the incidence behaviour of the curves , i.e. parabolas and lines, in the real affine plane. In order to simplify the structure, to any curve the point is added. A further advantage of this completion is that the plane geometry of the completed parabolas/lines is isomorphic to the geometry of the plane sections of a cylinder (see below).

The classical real Laguerre plane edit

Originally the classical Laguerre plane was defined as the geometry of the oriented lines and circles in the real Euclidean plane (see [1]). Here we prefer the parabola model of the classical Laguerre plane.

We define:

  the set of points,   the set of cycles.

The incidence structure   is called classical Laguerre plane.

The point set is   plus a copy of   (see figure). Any parabola/line   gets the additional point  .

Points with the same x-coordinate cannot be connected by curves  . Hence we define:

Two points   are parallel ( ) if   or there is no cycle containing   and  .

For the description of the classical real Laguerre plane above two points   are parallel if and only if  .   is an equivalence relation, similar to the parallelity of lines.

The incidence structure   has the following properties:

Lemma:

  • For any three points  , pairwise not parallel, there is exactly one cycle   containing  .
  • For any point   and any cycle   there is exactly one point   such that  .
  • For any cycle  , any point   and any point   that is not parallel to   there is exactly one cycle   through   with  , i.e.   and   touch each other at  .
 
Laguerre-plane: stereographic projection of the x-z-plane onto a cylinder

Similar to the sphere model of the classical Moebius plane there is a cylinder model for the classical Laguerre plane:

  is isomorphic to the geometry of plane sections of a circular cylinder in   .

The following mapping   is a projection with center   that maps the x-z-plane onto the cylinder with the equation  , axis   and radius  

 
  • The points   (line on the cylinder through the center) appear not as images.
  •   projects the parabola/line with equation   into the plane  . So, the image of the parabola/line is the plane section of the cylinder with a non perpendicular plane and hence a circle/ellipse without point  . The parabolas/line   are mapped onto (horizontal) circles.
  • A line(a=0) is mapped onto a circle/Ellipse through center   and a parabola (  ) onto a circle/ellipse that do not contain  .

The axioms of a Laguerre plane edit

The Lemma above gives rise to the following definition:

Let   be an incidence structure with point set   and set of cycles  .
Two points   are parallel ( ) if   or there is no cycle containing   and  .
  is called Laguerre plane if the following axioms hold:

 
Laguerre-plane: axioms
B1: For any three points  , pairwise not parallel, there is exactly one cycle   that contains  .
B2: For any point   and any cycle   there is exactly one point   such that  .
B3: For any cycle  , any point   and any point   that is not parallel to   there is exactly one cycle   through   with  ,
i.e.   and   touch each other at  .
B4: Any cycle contains at least three points. There is at least one cycle. There are at least four points not on a cycle.

Four points   are concyclic if there is a cycle   with  .

From the definition of relation   and axiom B2 we get

Lemma: Relation   is an equivalence relation.

Following the cylinder model of the classical Laguerre-plane we introduce the denotation:

a) For   we set  . b) An equivalence class   is called generator.

For the classical Laguerre plane a generator is a line parallel to the y-axis (plane model) or a line on the cylinder (space model).

The connection to linear geometry is given by the following definition:

For a Laguerre plane   we define the local structure

 

and call it the residue at point P.

In the plane model of the classical Laguerre plane   is the real affine plane  . In general we get

Theorem: Any residue of a Laguerre plane is an affine plane.

And the equivalent definition of a Laguerre plane:

Theorem: An incidence structure together with an equivalence relation   on   is a Laguerre plane if and only if for any point   the residue   is an affine plane.

Finite Laguerre planes edit

 
minimal model of a Laguerre plane (only 4 of 8 cycles are shown)

The following incidence structure is a "minimal model" of a Laguerre plane:

 
 
 

Hence   and  

For finite Laguerre planes, i.e.  , we get:

Lemma: For any cycles   and any generator   of a finite Laguerre plane   we have:

 .

For a finite Laguerre plane   and a cycle   the integer   is called order of  .

From combinatorics we get

Lemma: Let   be a Laguerre—plane of order  . Then

a) any residue   is an affine plane of order   b)   c)  

Miquelian Laguerre planes edit

Unlike Moebius planes the formal generalization of the classical model of a Laguerre plane, i.e. replacing   by an arbitrary field  , always leads to an example of a Laguerre plane.

Theorem: For a field   and

   ,
  the incidence structure
  is a Laguerre plane with the following parallel relation:   if and only if  .

Similarly to a Möbius plane the Laguerre version of the Theorem of Miquel holds:

 
Theorem of Miquel (circles drawn instead of parabolas)

Theorem of Miquel: For the Laguerre plane   the following is true:

If for any 8 pairwise not parallel points   that can be assigned to the vertices of a cube such that the points in 5 faces correspond to concyclical quadruples then the sixth quadruple of points is concyclical, too.

(For a better overview in the figure there are circles drawn instead of parabolas)

The importance of the Theorem of Miquel shows in the following theorem, which is due to v. d. Waerden, Smid and Chen:

Theorem: Only a Laguerre plane   satisfies the theorem of Miquel.

Because of the last theorem   is called a "Miquelian Laguerre plane".

The minimal model of a Laguerre plane is miquelian. It is isomorphic to the Laguerre plane   with   (field  ).

A suitable stereographic projection shows that   is isomorphic to the geometry of the plane sections on a quadric cylinder over field  .

Ovoidal Laguerre planes edit

There are many Laguerre planes that are not miquelian (see weblink below). The class that is most similar to miquelian Laguerre planes is the ovoidal Laguerre planes. An ovoidal Laguerre plane is the geometry of the plane sections of a cylinder that is constructed by using an oval instead of a non degenerate conic. An oval is a quadratic set and bears the same geometric properties as a non degenerate conic in a projective plane: 1) a line intersects an oval in zero, one, or two points and 2) at any point there is a unique tangent. A simple oval in the real plane can be constructed by glueing together two suitable halves of different ellipses, such that the result is not a conic. Even in the finite case there exist ovals (see quadratic set).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Benz, Walter (2013) [1973], Vorlesungen über Geometrie der Algebren (in German), Heidelberg: Springer, p. 11, ISBN 9783642886713

External links edit