Finite geometry
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A finite geometry is any geometric system that has only a finite number of points. Euclidean geometry, for example, is not finite, because a Euclidean line contains infinitely many points, in fact precisely the same number of points as there are real numbers. A finite geometry can have any (finite) number of dimensions.
Finite planes
The following remarks apply only to finite planes. There are two kinds of finite plane geometry: affine and projective. In an affine geometry, the normal sense of parallel lines applies. In a projective plane, by contrast, any two lines intersect at a unique point, and so parallel lines do not exist. Both finite affine plane geometry and finite projective plane geometry may be described by fairly simple axioms.For an affine plane geometry, the axioms are as follows:
- Given any two distinct points, there is exactly one line that includes both points.
- The parallel postulate: Given a line L and a point P not on L, there exists exactly one line through P that is parallel to L.
- There exists a set of four points, no three collinear.
(Figures of affine planes of orders 2 and 3 to be added.)
The axioms for a projective plane geometry are:
- Two distinct points lie on exactly one line.
- Two distinct lines intersect at exactly one point.
- There exists a set of four points, no three collinear.
![]() Diagram of the Fano plane |
A permutation of the Fano plane's seven points that carries collinear points (points on the same line) to collinear points is called a "symmetry" of the plane. The full symmetry group is of order 168 and is isomorphic to the group PSL(2,7) = PSL(3,2), and general linear group GL(3,2). For a different representation of the Fano plane that allows study of this full group of 168 symmetries, see [The Eightfold Cube].
It is well-established that both affine and projective planes of order n exist when n is a prime power, a prime number raised to a positive integer exponent. It is conjectured that no finite planes exist with orders that are not prime powers, although this statement has not been proved. The best result to date is the Bruck-Ryser theorem, which states: If n is a positive integer of the form 4k + 1 or 4k + 2 and n is not equal to the sum of two integer squares, then n does not occur as the order of a finite plane. The smallest integer that is not a prime power and not covered by the Bruck-Ryser theorem is 10; 10 is of the form 4k + 2, but it is equal to the sum of squares 12 + 32. Using sophisticated techniques and computer analysis, it has been shown that 10 is also not the order of a finite plane. The next smallest number to consider is 12, for which neither a positive nor a negative result has been proved.
Finite spaces of 3 or more dimensions
For some important differences between finite plane geometry and the geometry of higher-dimensional finite spaces, see axiomatic projective space. For a discussion of higher-dimensional finite spaces in general, see, for instance, the works of [J.W.P. Hirschfeld]. For a discussion of the smallest affine 3-space-- 8 points that can be visualized as the subcubes of a 2×2×2 cube-- see [Block Designs in Art and Mathematics]. For discussions of the smallest projective 3-space, see [Geometry of the 4×4 Square] and [The Diamond Theorem].
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