Projective line over a ringIn mathematics, the projective line over a ring is an extension of the concept of projective line over a field. Given a ring A (with 1), the projective line P1(A) over A consists of points identified by projective coordinates. Let A× be the group of units of A; pairs (a, b) and (c, d) from A × A are related when there is a u in A× such that ua = c and ub = d. This relation is an equivalence relation. A typical equivalence class is written U[a, b]. P1(A) = { U[a, b] | aA + bA = A }, that is, U[a, b] is in the projective line if the one-sided ideal generated by a and b is all of A. The projective line P1(A) is equipped with a group of homographies. The homographies are expressed through use of the matrix ring over A and its group of units V as follows: If c is in Z(A×), the center of A×, then the group action of matrix on P1(A) is the same as the action of the identity matrix. Such matrices represent a normal subgroup N of V. The homographies of P1(A) correspond to elements of the quotient group V / N. P1(A) is considered an extension of the ring A since it contains a copy of A due to the embedding E : a → U[a, 1]. The multiplicative inverse mapping u → 1/u, ordinarily restricted to A×, is expressed by a homography on P1(A): Furthermore, for u,v ∈ A×, the mapping a → uav can be extended to a homography: Since u is arbitrary, it may be substituted for u−1. Homographies on P1(A) are called linear-fractional transformations since InstancesRings that are fields are most familiar: The projective line over GF(2) has three elements: U[0, 1], U[1, 0], and U[1, 1]. Its homography group is the permutation group on these three.[1]: 29 The ring Z / 3Z, or GF(3), has the elements 1, 0, and −1; its projective line has the four elements U[1, 0], U[1, 1], U[0, 1], U[1, −1] since both 1 and −1 are units. The homography group on this projective line has 12 elements, also described with matrices or as permutations.[1]: 31 For a finite field GF(q), the projective line is the Galois geometry PG(1, q). J. W. P. Hirschfeld has described the harmonic tetrads in the projective lines for q = 4, 5, 7, 8, 9.[2] Over discrete ringsConsider P1(Z / nZ) when n is a composite number. If p and q are distinct primes dividing n, then ⟨p⟩ and ⟨q⟩ are maximal ideals in Z / nZ and by Bézout's identity there are a and b in Z such that ap + bq = 1, so that U[p, q] is in P1(Z / nZ) but it is not an image of an element under the canonical embedding. The whole of P1(Z / nZ) is filled out by elements U[up, vq], where u ≠ v and u, v ∈ A×, A× being the units of Z / nZ. The instances Z / nZ are given here for n = 6, 10, and 12, where according to modular arithmetic the group of units of the ring is (Z / 6Z)× = {1, 5}, (Z / 10Z)× = {1, 3, 7, 9}, and (Z / 12Z)× = {1, 5, 7, 11} respectively. Modular arithmetic will confirm that, in each table, a given letter represents multiple points. In these tables a point U[m, n] is labeled by m in the row at the table bottom and n in the column at the left of the table. For instance, the point at infinity A = U[v, 0], where v is a unit of the ring.
The extra points can be associated with Q ⊂ R ⊂ C, the rationals in the extended complex upper-half plane. The group of homographies on P1(Z / nZ) is called a principal congruence subgroup.[3] For the rational numbers Q, homogeneity of coordinates means that every element of P1(Q) may be represented by an element of P1(Z). Similarly, a homography of P1(Q) corresponds to an element of the modular group, the automorphisms of P1(Z). Over continuous ringsThe projective line over a division ring results in a single auxiliary point ∞ = U[1, 0]. Examples include the real projective line, the complex projective line, and the projective line over quaternions. These examples of topological rings have the projective line as their one-point compactifications. The case of the complex number field C has the Möbius group as its homography group. The projective line over the dual numbers was described by Josef Grünwald in 1906.[4] This ring includes a nonzero nilpotent n satisfying nn = 0. The plane { z = x + yn | x, y ∈ R } of dual numbers has a projective line including a line of points U[1, xn], x ∈ R.[5] Isaak Yaglom has described it as an "inversive Galilean plane" that has the topology of a cylinder when the supplementary line is included.[6]: 149–153 Similarly, if A is a local ring, then P1(A) is formed by adjoining points corresponding to the elements of the maximal ideal of A. The projective line over the ring M of split-complex numbers introduces auxiliary lines { U[1, x(1 + j)] | x ∈ R } and { U[1, x(1 − j)] | x ∈ R } Using stereographic projection the plane of split-complex numbers is closed up with these lines to a hyperboloid of one sheet.[6]: 174–200 [7] The projective line over M may be called the Minkowski plane when characterized by behaviour of hyperbolas under homographic mapping. ModulesThe projective line P1(A) over a ring A can also be identified as the space of projective modules in the module A ⊕ A. An element of P1(A) is then a direct summand of A ⊕ A. This more abstract approach follows the view of projective geometry as the geometry of subspaces of a vector space, sometimes associated with the lattice theory of Garrett Birkhoff[8] or the book Linear Algebra and Projective Geometry by Reinhold Baer. In the case of the ring of rational integers Z, the module summand definition of P1(Z) narrows attention to the U[m, n], m coprime to n, and sheds the embeddings that are a principal feature of P1(A) when A is topological. The 1981 article by W. Benz, Hans-Joachim Samaga, & Helmut Scheaffer mentions the direct summand definition. In an article "Projective representations: projective lines over rings"[9] the group of units of a matrix ring M2(R) and the concepts of module and bimodule are used to define a projective line over a ring. The group of units is denoted by GL(2, R), adopting notation from the general linear group, where R is usually taken to be a field. The projective line is the set of orbits under GL(2, R) of the free cyclic submodule R(1, 0) of R × R. Extending the commutative theory of Benz, the existence of a right or left multiplicative inverse of a ring element is related to P1(R) and GL(2, R). The Dedekind-finite property is characterized. Most significantly, representation of P1(R) in a projective space over a division ring K is accomplished with a (K, R)-bimodule U that is a left K-vector space and a right R-module. The points of P1(R) are subspaces of P1(K, U × U) isomorphic to their complements. Cross-ratioA homography h that takes three particular ring elements a, b, c to the projective line points U[0, 1], U[1, 1], U[1, 0] is called the cross-ratio homography. Sometimes[10][11] the cross-ratio is taken as the value of h on a fourth point x : (x, a, b, c) = h(x). To build h from a, b, c the generator homographies are used, with attention to fixed points: +1 and −1 are fixed under inversion, U[1, 0] is fixed under translation, and the "rotation" with u leaves U[0, 1] and U[1, 0] fixed. The instructions are to place c first, then bring a to U[0, 1] with translation, and finally to use rotation to move b to U[1, 1]. Lemma: If A is a commutative ring and b − a, c − b, c − a are all units, then (b − c)−1 + (c − a)−1 is a unit. Proof: Evidently is a unit, as required. Theorem: If (b − c)−1 + (c − a)−1 is a unit, then there is a homography h in G(A) such that
Proof: The point p = (b − c)−1 + (c − a)−1 is the image of b after a was put to 0 and then inverted to U[1, 0], and the image of c is brought to U[0, 1]. As p is a unit, its inverse used in a rotation will move p to U[1, 1], resulting in a, b, c being all properly placed. The lemma refers to sufficient conditions for the existence of h. One application of cross ratio defines the projective harmonic conjugate of a triple a, b, c, as the element x satisfying (x, a, b, c) = −1. Such a quadruple is a harmonic tetrad. Harmonic tetrads on the projective line over a finite field GF(q) were used in 1954 to delimit the projective linear groups PGL(2, q) for q = 5, 7, and 9, and demonstrate accidental isomorphisms.[12] ChainsThe real line in the complex plane gets permuted with circles and other real lines under Möbius transformations, which actually permute the canonical embedding of the real projective line in the complex projective line. Suppose A is an algebra over a field F, generalizing the case where F is the real number field and A is the field of complex numbers. The canonical embedding of P1(F) into P1(A) is A chain is the image of P1(F) under a homography on P1(A). Four points lie on a chain if and only if their cross-ratio is in F. Karl von Staudt exploited this property in his theory of "real strokes" [reeler Zug].[13] Point-parallelismTwo points of P1(A) are parallel if there is no chain connecting them. The convention has been adopted that points are parallel to themselves. This relation is invariant under the action of a homography on the projective line. Given three pair-wise non-parallel points, there is a unique chain that connects the three.[14] HistoryAugust Ferdinand Möbius investigated the Möbius transformations between his book Barycentric Calculus (1827) and his 1855 paper "Theorie der Kreisverwandtschaft in rein geometrischer Darstellung". Karl Wilhelm Feuerbach and Julius Plücker are also credited with originating the use of homogeneous coordinates. Eduard Study in 1898, and Élie Cartan in 1908, wrote articles on hypercomplex numbers for German and French Encyclopedias of Mathematics, respectively, where they use these arithmetics with linear fractional transformations in imitation of those of Möbius. In 1902 Theodore Vahlen contributed a short but well-referenced paper exploring some linear fractional transformations of a Clifford algebra.[15] The ring of dual numbers D gave Josef Grünwald opportunity to exhibit P1(D) in 1906.[4] Corrado Segre (1912) continued the development with that ring.[5] Arthur Conway, one of the early adopters of relativity via biquaternion transformations, considered the quaternion-multiplicative-inverse transformation in his 1911 relativity study.[16] In 1947 some elements of inversive quaternion geometry were described by P.G. Gormley in Ireland.[17] In 1968 Isaak Yaglom's Complex Numbers in Geometry appeared in English, translated from Russian. There he uses P1(D) to describe line geometry in the Euclidean plane and P1(M) to describe it for Lobachevski's plane. Yaglom's text A Simple Non-Euclidean Geometry appeared in English in 1979. There in pages 174 to 200 he develops Minkowskian geometry and describes P1(M) as the "inversive Minkowski plane". The Russian original of Yaglom's text was published in 1969. Between the two editions, Walter Benz (1973) published his book,[7] which included the homogeneous coordinates taken from M. See alsoNotes and references
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