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Pencils of Null Polarities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Seymour Schuster*
Affiliation:
Carleton College Northfield, Minnesota
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A theorem due to von Staudt states that a null polarity in complex projective space of three dimensions is determined by a selfpolar skew pentagon. By allowing an element of the self-polar pentagon to vary in a suitable manner we can arrive at a family of ∞1 null polarities, which we term a pencil of null polarities. Each polarity of the pencil distinguishes a linear complex as the class of self-polar lines. Thus, associated with the pencil is a family of ∞1 linear complexes, which we term a pencil of linear complexes.

It is the purpose of this paper to continue an earlier investigation of pencils of polarities (2), by applying analogous techniques to the study of pencils of null polarities and pencils of linear complexes.

Since it develops that the lines common to all linear complexes of a pencil are the lines of a linear congruence, the central question has been: How many of the different types of linear congruences can be achieved in this manner? Happily, it can be reported that the classification of pencils of null polarities yields all of the three types of linear congruences (4, pp. 140-141).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Mathematical Society 1959

References

1. Baldus, R., Zur Klassification der ebenen und raumlichen Kollineationen, Sitz. Rayerischen Akad. (1928), 375395.Google Scholar
2. M.|Coxeter, H. S., Non-euclidean geometry (3rd ed.; Toronto 1957).Google Scholar
3. Schuster, S., Pencils of polarities in projective space, Can. J. Math., 8 (1956), 119144.Google Scholar
4. Todd, J. A., Projective and analytical geometry (London, 1947).Google Scholar
5. Veblen, O. and Young, J. W., Projective geometry, vol. 1 (Boston, 1910).Google Scholar