Planar ternary ring

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In mathematics, a ternary ring is an algebraic structure (R,T) consisting of a non-empty set R and a ternary mapping T\colon R^{3}\to R\,, and a planar ternary ring (PTR) or ternary field is special type of ternary ring used by Hall (1943) to construct projective planes by means of coordinates. A planar ternary ring is not a ring in the traditional sense.

Definition

A planar ternary ring is a structure (R,T) where R is a nonempty set, containing at least two distinct elements, called 0 and 1, and T\colon R^{3}\to R\, a mapping which satisfies these five axioms:

  1. T(a,0,b)=T(0,a,b)=b\quad \forall a,b\in R;
  2. T(1,a,0)=T(a,1,0)=a\quad \forall a\in R;
  3. \forall a,b,c,d\in R,a\neq c, there is a unique x\in R such that : T(x,a,b)=T(x,c,d)\,;
  4. \forall a,b,c\in R, there is a unique x\in R, such that T(a,b,x)=c\,; and
  5. \forall a,b,c,d\in R,a\neq c, the equations T(a,x,y)=b,T(c,x,y)=d\, have a unique solution (x,y)\in R^{2}.

When R is finite, the third and fifth axioms are equivalent in the presence of the fourth.[1] No other pair (0', 1') in R^{2} can be found such that T still satisfies the first two axioms.

Binary operations

Addition

Define a\oplus b=T(a,1,b).[2] The structure (R,\oplus ) is a loop with identity element 0.

Multiplication

Define a\otimes b=T(a,b,0). The set R_{{0}}=R\setminus \{0\}\, is closed under this multiplication. The structure (R_{{0}},\otimes ) is also a loop, with identity element 1.

Linear PTR

A planar ternary ring (R,T) is said to be linear if T(a,b,c)=(a\otimes b)\oplus c\quad \forall a,b,c\in R. For example, the planar ternary ring associated to a quasifield is (by construction) linear.[citation needed]

Connection with projective planes

Given a planar ternary ring (R,T), one can construct a projective plane with point set P and line set L as follows:[3][4] (Note that \infty is an extra symbol not in R.)

Let

  • P=\{(a,b)|a,b\in R\}\cup \{(a)|a\in R\}\cup \{(\infty )\}, and
  • L=\{[a,b]|a,b\in R\}\cup \{[a]|a\in R\}\cup \{[\infty ]\}.

Then define, \forall a,b,c,d\in R, the incidence relation I in this way:

((a,b),[c,d])\in I\Longleftrightarrow T(a,c,d)=b
((a,b),[c])\in I\Longleftrightarrow a=c
((a,b),[\infty ])\notin I
((a),[c,d])\in I\Longleftrightarrow a=c
((a),[c])\notin I
((a),[\infty ])\in I
(((\infty ),[c,d])\notin I
((\infty ),[a])\in I
((\infty ),[\infty ])\in I

Every projective plane can be constructed in this way, starting with an appropriate planar ternary ring. However, two nonisomorphic planar ternary rings can lead to the construction of isomorphic projective planes.

Conversely, given any finite projective plane π, by chosing an (ordered) set of four points, labelled o, e, u, and v, no three of which lie on the same line, coordinates can be introduced in π so that these special points are given the coordinates: o = (0,0), e = (1,1), v = (\infty ) and u = (0).[5] The ternary operation is now defined on the (finite) coordinate symbols by y = T(x,a,b) if and only if the point (x,y) lies on the line which joins (a) with (0,b). The axioms defining a projective plane are used to show that this gives a planar ternary ring.

Linearity of the PTR is equivalent to a geometric condition holding in the associated projective plane.[6]

Related algebraic structures

PTR's which satisfy additional algebraic conditions are given other names. These names are not uniformly applied in the literature. The following listing of names and properties is taken from Dembowski (1968, p. 129).

A linear PTR whose additive loop is associative (and thus a group ), is called a cartesian group. In a cartesian group, the mappings

x\longrightarrow -x\otimes a+x\otimes b, and x\longrightarrow a\otimes x-b\otimes x

must be permutations whenever a\neq b. Since cartesian groups are groups under addition, we revert to using a simple "+" for the additive operation.

A quasifield is a cartesian group satisfying the right distributive law: (x+y)\otimes z=x\otimes z+y\otimes z. Addition in any quasifield is commutative.

A semifield is a quasifield which also satisfies the left distributive law: x\otimes (y+z)=x\otimes y+x\otimes z.

A planar nearfield is a quasifield whose multiplicative loop is associative (and hence a group). Not all nearfields are planar nearfields.

Notes

  1. Hughes & Piper 1973, p. 118, Theorem 5.4
  2. In the literature there are two versions of this definition. This is the form used by Hall (1959, p. 355), Albert & Sandler (1968, p. 50),Stevenson (1972, p. 274) and Dembowski (1968, p. 128), while a\oplus b=T(1,a,b) is used by Hughes & Piper (1973, p. 117) and Pickert (1975, p. 38). The difference comes from the alternative ways these authors coordinatize the plane.
  3. R. H. Bruck, Recent Advances in the Foundations of Euclidean Plane Geometry, (1955) Appendix I.
  4. Hall 1943, p.247 Theorem 5.4
  5. This can be done in several ways. A short description of the method used by Hall (1943) can be found in Dembowski (1968, p. 127).
  6. Dembowski 1968, p. 129

References

  • Albert, A. Adrian; Sandler, Reuben (1968). An Introduction to Finite Projective Planes. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 
  • Rafael Artzy (1965) Linear Geometry, Chapter 4 Axiomatic Plane Geometry, Addison-Wesley.
  • Dembowski, Peter (1968), Finite geometries, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete, Band 44, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-61786-8, MR 0233275 
  • Hall, Jr., Marshall (1943), "Projective planes", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society (American Mathematical Society) 54 (2): 229–277, ISSN 0002-9947, JSTOR 1990331, MR 0008892 
  • Hall, Jr., Marshall (1959), The Theory of Groups, New York: The MacMillan Company 
  • Hughes, Daniel R.; Piper, Fred C. (1973), Projective Planes, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0387900446 
  • Pickert, Günter (1975), Projektive Ebenen, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3540072802 
  • Stevenson, Frederick (1972), Projective Planes, San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company, ISBN 071670443-9 
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