Klein geometry
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Named after German mathematician Christian Felix Klein (1849—1925). The concept arose from Klein's Erlangen program (published 1872).
Noun
[edit]Klein geometry (plural Klein geometries)
- (differential geometry) A type of geometry (mathematical object representing a space and its spatial relationships); a homogeneous space X together with a symmetry group which represents the group action on X of some Lie group;
(more formally) an ordered pair (G, H), where G is a Lie group and H a closed Lie subgroup of G such that the left coset space G / H is connected.- Given a Klein geometry , the group is called the principal group and is called the space of the geometry.
- The space of a Klein geometry is a smooth manifold of dimension .
- 1934, American Journal of Mathematics[1], volume 56, Johns Hopkins University Press, page 153:
- The present paper develops the general theory of non-holonomic geometries as generalizations of Klein geometries starting from a set of fundamental assumptions presented in the form of postulates.
- 2006, Luciano Boi, “The Aleph of Space”, in Giandomenico Sica, editor, What is Geometry?, Polimetrica, page 91:
- The kernel of a Klein geometry is the largest subgroup of that is normal in . A Klein geometry is effective if and locally effective if is discrete. A Klein geometry is geometrically oriented if is connected.
- 2009, Andreas Čap, Jan Slovák, Parabolic Geometries I, American Mathematical Society, page 49:
- A careful geometric study of Klein geometries is available in [Sh97, Chapter 4].
Given a Klein geometry we may first ask whether all of is “visible” on , i.e. whether the action of on is effective. In this case, we call the Klein geometry effective.
- (loosely) The coset space G / H.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]type of geometry
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