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COMBINATORIAL DEFINITION According to the more general, combinatorial definition, a projective plane consists of a set of "lines" and a set of "points" with the following properties: #Given any two distinct points, there is exactly one line incident with both of them. #Given any two distinct lines, there is exactly one point incident with both of them. #There are four points such that no line is incident with more than two of them. The last condition simply excludes some degenerate cases (see Below ). Examples A projective plane is an abstract mathematical concept, so the "lines" need not be anything resembling ordinary lines, nor need the "points" resemble ordinary points. The most common projective plane is the Real Projective Plane , which is a ''topological'' Surface with surprising geometric properties; after that is the Complex Projective Plane of Algebraic Geometry , a topological four-dimensional Manifold . For any Field ''K'', there is a projective plane with three Homogeneous Coordinates in ''K'', which can also be thought of in terms of a three-dimensional Vector Space ''V'' over ''K'', 'points' being one-dimensional subspaces and 'lines' two-dimensional subspaces. The smallest possible projective plane has only seven points and seven lines. It is often called the Fano Plane , and is shown in the picture on the right (see also Finite Geometry ). In this representation of the Fano plane, the seven points are shown as small black balls, and the seven lines are shown as six line segments and a circle. However, we could equally consider the balls to be the "lines" and the line segments and circle to be the "points" — this is an example of the Duality of projective planes: if the lines and points are interchanged, the result is still a projective plane. A permutation of the seven points that carries Collinear points (points on the same line) to collinear points is called a " Symmetry " of the plane. Properties It can be shown that a projective plane has the same number of lines as it has points. This number can be infinite (as for the real projective plane) or finite (as for the Fano plane). A finite projective plane has n where ''n'' is an Integer called the ''order'' of the projective plane. (The Fano plane therefore has order 2.) For all known finite projective planes, the order n is a prime power. The existence of finite projective planes of other orders is an open question. The only general restriction known on the order is the Bruck-Ryser-Chowla Theorem that if the order n is congruent to 1 or 2 mod 4, it must be the sum of two squares. This rules out n = 6. The next case n = 10 has been ruled out by massive computer calculations, and there is nothing more known, in particular n = 12 is still open. There is a projective plane of order n if and only if there is an affine plane of order n. When there is only one affine plane of order n there is only one projective plane of order n, but the converse is not true. A projective plane of order ''n'' has ''n'' + 1 points on every line, and ''n'' + 1 lines passing through every point, and is therefore a Steiner S(2, ''n'' +1, ''n''2 + ''n'' + 1) system (see Steiner System ). Conversely, one can prove that all Steiner systems of this form () are projective planes. LINEAR ALGEBRA DEFINITION One can construct projective planes (or higher dimensional Projective Space s) by linear algebra over any division ring — not necessarily Commutative . See for example Quaternionic Projective Space . If we use a Finite Field with ''p''''n'' elements we get a finite projective plane with order ''p''''n''. The Fano Plane is then the plane over the field with two elements, Z''2''. Generalizations One can also do the reverse, and construct a coordinate "ring" - a so-called Planar Ternary Ring (not necessarily a genuine ring) corresponding to any projective plane as defined above. Algebraic properties of this "ring" turn out to correspond to geometric incidence properties of the plane. For example, Desargues' Theorem corresponds to the coordinate ring being a Division Ring , while Pappus's Theorem corresponds to this ring being Commutative . However, the "ring" need not be of this type, and there are many non-Desarguesian projective planes. Alternative , not necessarily Associative division rings correspond to Moufang planes. In the case of finite projective planes, the only proof known of the purely geometric statement that Desargues theorem then implies Pappus' theorem (the converse being always true and provable geometrically) is through this algebraic route, using Wedderburn's Theorem that finite division rings must be commutative. It is possible to make analogous incidence definitions for higher dimensional projective n-spaces, for n larger than 2. These turn out to not be as interesting as the planar case, as they correspond to classical projective geometry over by using incidence properties in this higher dimensional space and thus the coordinate "ring" must be a Division Ring . The plane over the Octonions turns out to be an interesting real manifold, which can be used for geometric constructions and understanding of the Exceptional Lie Groups . DEGENERATE PLANES Degenerate planes do not fulfill the Third Condition above. There are two families of degenerate planes. 1) For any number of points ''P''1, ..., ''P''''n'', and lines ''L''1, ..., ''L''''m'', L L L :... L 2) For any number of points ''P''1, ..., ''P''''n'', and lines ''L''1, ..., ''L''''n'', (same number of points as lines) L L L :... L CONNECTION WITH LATIN SQUARES A projective plane of order ''n'' () exists if and only if there is an affine plane of this order. The number of mutually Orthogonal Latin Squares is at most ''n'' − 1. It turns out ''n'' − 1 is possible if and only if there is an affine plane of this order. CONSTRUCTION OF PROJECTIVE PLANES OF PRIME ORDER Method 1 This is the standard construction using Homogeneous Coordinates over a Finite Field . Method 2 To construct a projective plane of order ''N'' (''N'' prime), proceed as follows: :Create one point ''P'' :Create ''N'' points, which we will label ''P''(''c'') : ''c'' = 0, ..., (''N'' − 1) :Create ''N''2 points, which we will label ''P''(''r'', ''c'') : ''r'', ''c'' = 0, ..., (''N'' − 1) On these points, construct the following lines: :One line ''L'' = { ''P'', ''P''(0), ..., ''P''(''N'' − 1)} N N Note that the expression :(''r'' + ''ci'') mod ''N'' will pass once through each value as i varies from 0 to ''N'' − 1, but only if is ''N'' is prime. By this construction, we have two above. For example, for ''N''=2: :One line ''L'' = { ''P'', ''P''(0), ''P''(1)} :2 lines ''L''(''c'') = {''P'', ''P''(0,''c''), ''P''(1,''c'')} : ''c'' = 0, 1 :4 lines ''L''(''r'', ''c''): ''P''(''c'') and the points P((''r'' + ''ci'') mod ''2'', ''i''), where i = 0, 1 : ''r'', ''c'' = 0, 1 SMALL ORDERS While the classification of all projective planes is far from done, here are some results for some orders :
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