Hall plane
In mathematics, a Hall plane is a non-Desarguesian projective plane constructed by Marshall Hall Jr. (1943).[1] There are examples of order for every prime p and every positive integer n provided .[2]
Algebraic construction via Hall systems
The original construction of Hall planes was based on the Hall quasifield (also called a Hall system), H of order for p a prime. The creation of the plane from the quasifield follows the standard construction (see quasifield for details).
To build a Hall quasifield, start with a Galois field, for p a prime and a quadratic irreducible polynomial over F. Extend , a two-dimensional vector space over F, to a quasifield by defining a multiplication on the vectors by when and otherwise.
Writing the elements of H in terms of a basis <1, λ>, that is, identifying (x,y) with x + λy as x and y vary over F, we can identify the elements of F as the ordered pairs (x, 0), i.e. x + λ0. The properties of the defined multiplication which turn the right vector space H into a quasifield are:
- every element α of H not in F satisfies the quadratic equation f(α) = 0;
- F is in the kernel of H (meaning that (α + β)c = αc + βc, and (αβ)c = α(βc) for all α, β in H and all c in F); and
- every element of F commutes (multiplicatively) with all the elements of H.[3]
Derivation
Another construction that produces Hall planes is obtained by applying derivation to Desarguesian planes.
A process, due to T. G. Ostrom, which replaces certain sets of lines in a projective plane by alternate sets in such a way that the new structure is still a projective plane is called derivation. We give the details of this process.[4] Start with a projective plane of order and designate one line as its line at infinity. Let A be the affine plane . A set D of points of is called a derivation set if for every pair of distinct points X and Y of A which determine a line meeting in a point of D, there is a Baer subplane containing X, Y and D (we say that such Baer subplanes belong to D.) Define a new affine plane as follows: The points of are the points of A. The lines of are the lines of which do not meet at a point of D (restricted to A) and the Baer subplanes that belong to D (restricted to A). The set is an affine plane of order and it, or its projective completion, is called a derived plane.[5]
Properties
- Hall planes are translation planes.
- The Hall plane of order 9 is the only projective plane of Lenz-Barlotti type IVa.3, finite or infinite.[6] All other Hall planes are of Lenz-Barlotti type IVa.1.
- All finite Hall planes of the same order are isomorphic.
- Hall planes are not self-dual.
- All finite Hall planes contain subplanes of order 2 (Fano subplanes).
- All finite Hall planes contain subplanes of order different from 2.
- Hall planes are André planes.
The smallest Hall plane (order 9)
The Hall plane of order 9 was actually found earlier by Oswald Veblen and Joseph Wedderburn in 1907.[7] There are four quasifields of order nine which can be used to construct the Hall plane of order nine. Three of these are Hall systems generated by the irreducible polynomials , or . [8] The first of these produces an associative quasifield,[9] that is, a near-field, and it was in this context that the plane was discovered by Veblen and Wedderburn. This plane is often referred to as the nearfield plane of order nine.
Notes
- Hall Jr. (1943)
- Although the constructions will provide a projective plane of order 4, the unique such plane is Desarguesian and is generally not considered to be a Hall plane.
- Hughes & Piper (1973, pg. 183)
- Hughes & Piper (1973, pp. 202–218, Chapter X. Derivation)
- Hughes & Piper (1973, pg. 203, Theorem 10.2)
- Dembowski, Peter (1968), Finite geometries, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete, Band 44, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-61786-8, MR 0233275, page 126.
- Veblen & Wedderburn (1907)
- Stevenson (1972, pp. 333–334)
- Hughes & Piper (1973, pg. 186)
References
- Dembowski, P. (1968), Finite Geometries, Berlin: Springer-Verlag
- Hall Jr., Marshall (1943), "Projective Planes" (PDF), Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 54: 229–277, doi:10.2307/1990331, ISSN 0002-9947, JSTOR 1990331, MR 0008892
- D. Hughes and F. Piper (1973). Projective Planes. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-90044-6.
- Stevenson, Frederick W. (1972), Projective Planes, San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company, ISBN 0-7167-0443-9
- Veblen, Oscar; Wedderburn, Joseph H.M. (1907), "Non-Desarguesian and non-Pascalian geometries" (PDF), Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 8: 379–388, doi:10.2307/1988781
- Weibel, Charles (2007), "Survey of Non-Desarguesian Planes" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 54 (10): 1294–1303