Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- On maximum size anti-Pasch sets of triples
- Some simple 7–designs
- Inscribed bundles, Veronese surfaces and caps
- Embedding partial geometries in Steiner designs
- Finite geometry after Aschbacher's Theorem: PGL(n, q) from a Kleinian viewpoint
- The Hermitian function field arising from a cyclic arc in a Galois plane
- Intercalates everywhere
- Difference sets: an update
- Computational results for the known biplanes of order 9
- A survey of small embeddings for partial cycle systems
- Rosa triple systems
- Searching for spreads and packings
- A note on Buekenhout-Metz unitals
- Elation generalized quadrangles of order (q2, q)
- Uniform parallelisms of PG(3, 3)
- Double-fives and partial spreads in PG(5, 2)
- Rank three geometries with simplicial residues
- Generalized quadrangles and the Axiom of Veblen
- Talks
- Participants
Double-fives and partial spreads in PG(5, 2)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- On maximum size anti-Pasch sets of triples
- Some simple 7–designs
- Inscribed bundles, Veronese surfaces and caps
- Embedding partial geometries in Steiner designs
- Finite geometry after Aschbacher's Theorem: PGL(n, q) from a Kleinian viewpoint
- The Hermitian function field arising from a cyclic arc in a Galois plane
- Intercalates everywhere
- Difference sets: an update
- Computational results for the known biplanes of order 9
- A survey of small embeddings for partial cycle systems
- Rosa triple systems
- Searching for spreads and packings
- A note on Buekenhout-Metz unitals
- Elation generalized quadrangles of order (q2, q)
- Uniform parallelisms of PG(3, 3)
- Double-fives and partial spreads in PG(5, 2)
- Rank three geometries with simplicial residues
- Generalized quadrangles and the Axiom of Veblen
- Talks
- Participants
Summary
Abstract
A double-five of planes is a set ψ of 35 points in PG(5, 2) which admits two distinct decompositions ψ = α1 ∪ α2 ∪ α3 ∪ α4 ∪ α5 = β1 ∪ β2 ∪ β3 ∪ β4 ∪ β5 into a set of five mutually skew planes such that αr ∩ βr is a line, for each r, while αr ∩ βs is a point, for r ≠ s. In a recent paper, [Sh96], a construction of a double-five was given, starting out from a (suitably coloured) icosahedron, and some of its main properties were described. The present paper deals first of all with some further properties of double-fives. In particular the existence of an invariant symplectic form is demonstrated and some related duality properties are described.
Secondly the relationship of double-fives to partial spreads of planes in PG(5, 2) is considered. The α-planes, or equally the β-planes, of double-fives provide the only examples of maximal partial spreads. It is shown that one of the planes of a non-maximal partial spread of five planes is always privileged, and this fact is seen to give rise to a nice geometric construction of an overlarge set of nine 3-(8, 4, 1) designs having automorphism group ΓL2(8).
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- Information
- Geometry, Combinatorial Designs and Related Structures , pp. 201 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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