Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION
- Contents
- I THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY
- II REAL PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY: FOUNDATIONS
- III REAL PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY: POLARITIES, CONICS AND QUADRICS
- IV HOMOGENEOUS COORDINATES
- V ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN ONE DIMENSION
- VI ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- VII ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN THREE DIMENSIONS
- VIII DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY
- IX EUCLIDEAN AND HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY
- X HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- XI CIRCLES AND TRIANGLES
- XII THE USE OF A GENERAL TRIANGLE OF REFERENCE
- XIII AREA
- XIV EUCLIDEAN MODELS
- XV CONCLUDING REMARKS
- APPENDIX: ANGLES AND ARCS IN THE HYPERBOLIC PLANE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
VI - ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION
- Contents
- I THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY
- II REAL PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY: FOUNDATIONS
- III REAL PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY: POLARITIES, CONICS AND QUADRICS
- IV HOMOGENEOUS COORDINATES
- V ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN ONE DIMENSION
- VI ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- VII ELLIPTIC GEOMETRY IN THREE DIMENSIONS
- VIII DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY
- IX EUCLIDEAN AND HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY
- X HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- XI CIRCLES AND TRIANGLES
- XII THE USE OF A GENERAL TRIANGLE OF REFERENCE
- XIII AREA
- XIV EUCLIDEAN MODELS
- XV CONCLUDING REMARKS
- APPENDIX: ANGLES AND ARCS IN THE HYPERBOLIC PLANE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
Summary
Spherical and elliptic geometry. As we saw in §1.7, a convenient model for the elliptic plane can be obtained by abstractly identifying every pair of antipodal points on an ordinary sphere. The reflections and rotations which we shall define in §§6.2 and 6.3 are represented on the sphere by reflections in diametral planes and rotations about diameters.
In elliptic plane geometry, every reflection is a rotation. This rather startling result is a consequence of the fact that the product of the reflection in any diametral plane and the rotation through π about the perpendicular diameter is the central inversion (or point-reflection in the centre of the sphere), which interchanges antipodal points and so corresponds to the identity in elliptic geometry. In any orientable space (§2.5), a reflection reverses sense, whereas a rotation preserves sense. Thus the above remarks are closely associated with the non-orientability of the real projective plane (in which elliptic geometry operates). On a sphere, corresponding rotations about antipodal points have opposite senses; so the identification of such points abolishes the distinction of sense.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Non-Euclidean Geometry , pp. 109 - 127Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 1998