1. Two Famous Questions and a Projective/Algebraic Look at Hyperbolic Geometry
While physicists have long pondered the question of the physical nature of the “continuum”, mathematicians have struggled to similarly understand the corresponding mathematical structure. In the last decade, we have seen the emergence of rational trigonometry [
1,
2] as a viable alternative to traditional geometry, built not over a continuum of “real numbers”, but rather algebraically over a general field, so also over the rational numbers, or over finite fields.
Universal hyperbolic geometry (UHG) extends this understanding to the projective setting, yielding a new and broader approach to the Cayley–Klein framework (see [
3]) for the remarkable geometry discovered now almost two centuries ago by Bolyai, Gauss and Lobachevsky as in [
4,
5,
6]. See also [
7,
8] for the classical and modern use of projective metrical structures in geometry. In this paper, we will give an outline of this new approach, which connects naturally to the relativistic geometry of Lorentz, Einstein and Minkowski and also allows us to consider hyperbolic geometries over general fields, including finite fields.
To avoid technicalities and make the subject accessible to a wider audience, including physicists, we aim to describe things both geometrically in a projective visual fashion, as well as algebraically in a linear algebraic setting.
2. The Polarity of a Conic Discovered by Apollonius
We augment the projective plane, which we may regard as a two-dimensional affine plane and a line at infinity, with a fixed conic. This conic is called the absolute in Cayley–Klein geometry. In this universal hyperbolic geometry (UHG), developed in [
9,
10,
11,
12], we take it to be a circle, typically in blue, and call it the null circle.
The polarity associated with a conic was investigated by Apollonius and gives a duality between points
a and lines
in the space, which we also write as
Given a point
consider any two lines through
a, which meet the conic at two points each as in
Figure 1. The other two diagonal points of this cyclic quadrilateral defines the dual line
Remarkably, this construction does not depend on the choice of lines through
as Apollonius realized.
When a approaches the conic, the dual A approaches the tangent to the conic at that point. If b lies on then it turns out that a lies on
From this duality, we may define the perpendicularity, which lies at the core of hyperbolic geometry. Two points are perpendicular when one lies on the dual of the other, and similarly two lines are perpendicular when one passes through the dual of the other. We treat points and lines symmetrically!
Hyperbolic geometry is then the study of those aspects of projective geometry that are determined by the fixed conic, with isometries just those projective transformations, which fix the null circle. This turns out to be essentially the relativistic group with coefficients in the base field, as we shall see. However, to describe the actual metrical structure, we move beyond the usual hyperbolic distance and angle found in the classical theory of Bolyai, Gauss and Lobachevsky; rather, we employ hyperbolic analogues of the quadrance and spread of rational trigonometry.
3. Null Points, Lines and Light Cones
Null points are perpendicular to themselves; these are the points lying on the original null circle, such as
and
in
Figure 2. Null lines are also perpendicular to themselves; these are just duals of null points or the tangents to the null circle, as shown in
Figure 2. In classical hyperbolic geometry, only the interior of the circle is usually considered, and the absolute circle is considered to be “infinitely far away”. Here, we are interested in the entire projective plane, including also the null conic itself and its exterior, including actually points at infinity.
This corresponds to considering a relativistic space projectively: with the null conic corresponding to the light cone; points inside the null conic to time-like directions; and points outside the null conic to space-like directions. Like the physicist, we regard the entire space as of primary interest, not just the interior of our light cone, even if this is our initial orientation!
The usual geometry of special relativity in
dimensions, in a vector space with inner product:
when looked at projectively, gives us UHG, with the null cone
. The usual hyperboloid of two sheets
, the top sheet of which classically corresponds to the hyperbolic plane, is a Riemannian sub-manifold of the Lorentzian three-dimensional space. This variant of Euclidean structure holds in the interior of the null conic, but outside, we are in a de Sitter-type space as represented by the hyperboloid of one sheet
. This kind of universal hyperbolic geometry is no longer homogeneous, as points outside the null conic behave differently from points inside the conic, and indeed over more general fields, the distinction between these two types of points is considerably more subtle.
4. Triangle and Dual
To see, the importance and usefulness of considering both interior and exterior points, let us look at a triangle with sides the lines and its dual triangle with sides and These two triangles play now a symmetrical role: the duals of the points are the lines while the duals of the points are the lines
The dual triangle plays a natural role in establishing the existence of an orthocenter of a general triangle, which is a valid theorem in this form of hyperbolic geometry, although it is not in classical hyperbolic geometry! In
Figure 3, we see the three altitudes of the triangle
determined by lines from vertices to dual vertices, meeting at the orthocenter
The reason that this does not work in general in classical hyperbolic geometry is that the meeting of the three altitudes may well be outside the null conic even if all three points of the triangle are inside, and so it is invisible to the geometry of Bolyai, Gauss and Lobachevsky! Since this anecdotally was one of Einstein’s favourite geometry theorems, it is definitely worthwhile having it as part of the picture.
In fact, a similar discussion may be had for the circumcenter. This is all part of the rich and mostly new subject of hyperbolic triangle geometry; see for example [
11,
13,
14], which recently has also been extended to include quadrilateral geometry in [
15].
5. Quadrance May Be Defined Algebraically
In classical hyperbolic geometry, the metrical structure is introduced using differential geometry in the context of Riemannian metrics on smooth manifolds. In the more projective situation, as in [
16], the notions of projective quadrance and projective spread can be introduced using the fundamental idea of a cross-ratio of four points on a line, as appreciated also by [
17].
If four collinear points have projective coordinates
and
d, which can be either from the given field or possibly have the value infinity (∞), then their cross-ratio may be defined as:
Now, given two points
and
in the hyperbolic plane, they have dual lines
and
which meet the line
in the conjugate points:
giving four collinear points
and
Then, the (projective) quadrance between
and
is the cross-ratio:
In
Figure 4, we see an example of
exterior and
interior, to emphasize the case that this metrical notion applies very generally to all non-null points.
Define the spread between lines dually, so that:
In this way, the relation between the points and lines metrically is completely symmetric. There is a natural connection with the usual classical metrical notions in the Beltrami–Klein model (see [
5]) when we restrict to interior points (inside the light cone or null conic) and lines that meet also at interior points; in these cases:
6. The Algebraic Approach
Due to the modern familiarity with linear algebra, it may be useful to reframe the projective setup above using homogeneous coordinates, where we follow: [
9]. In a three-dimensional vector space of row vectors
, we may define a (hyperbolic) point
to be a one-dimensional subspace through a non-zero vector
This corresponds to the planar point
if
A (hyperbolic) line
may be defined to be a two-dimensional subspace with equation
. The incidence between these points and lines is that the point
lies on the line
, or equivalently
L passes through
precisely when:
In matrix terms, this is the relation:
The point
is then dual to the line
precisely when:
In this case, we write or This algebraic structure ensures that these definitions work over a general field.
The metrical structure comes about from the symmetric bilinear form (
1) of Einstein, Lorentz and Minkowski of the ambient three-dimensional space. It may be used to define a relation between one-dimensional subspaces as follows: the quadrance between points
and
is:
Dually, the spread between lines
and
is:
For three points
and
the three quadrances will be:
and for three lines
and
the three spreads will be:
7. The Main Trigonometric Laws of UHG
Here are the main trigonometric laws in the subject, established first in [
9]. We begin with essentially the one-dimensional situations:
Theorem 1 (Triple quad formula)
. If and are collinear points, then: Theorem 2 (Triple spread formula)
. If and are concurrent lines, then: Now, for the quadrances and spreads of a triangle
as in
Figure 5:
Theorem 3 (Pythagoras)
. If and are perpendicular lines, then: Theorem 4 (Pythagoras dual)
. If and are perpendicular points, then: Theorem 6 (Spread dual law)
. Theorem 8 (Cross dual law)
. There are three symmetrical forms of Pythagoras’s theorem, the cross law and their duals, obtained by rotating indices. These various laws replace the transcendental hyperbolic Pythagoras’ theorem, the sine law and cosine law of both kinds. They work over a general field, both inside and outside the null circle, and actually even with more general bilinear forms. They are arguably more natural and convenient for physicists.
The quantity:
is the quadrea of the triangle
and is somewhat analogous to the hyperbolic area of the triangle, but it is decidedly of a different character. It is a big step to make the transition from transcendental to purely algebraic concepts here: computations can actually now be exhibited completely and clearly.
8. Circles, Midpoints and Circumcenters
A hyperbolic circle with centre a and quadrance k is the locus of points x, which satisfy . This is a conic, which includes what in the classical literature are called “equi-distant curves” in the case of an external centre.
A midpoint
m of a side
is a point lying on the line
that satisfies
. Midpoints exist precisely when
is a square in the field. There are in general two midpoints if they exist at all, and they are perpendicular. A midline is the dual of a midpoint, or equivalently a line through a midpoint perpendicular to the line joining the two original points; in other words, the hyperbolic version of a perpendicular bisector. The following is illustrated in
Figure 6.
Theorem 9 (Circumcenters)
. Assume that the six midpoints m of a triangle exist. Then, they are collinear three at a time, lying on four distinct circumlines The six midlines M of are concurrent three at a time, meeting at four distinct circumcenters c that are dual to the circumlines C. The circumcenters are the centres of in general four hyperbolic circles that pass through the points of the triangle .
9. Sydpoints Augment Midpoints
While midpoints have been studied since the early days of the subject, an important related notion was only introduced very recently in [
12]. A sydpoint of a side
is a point
s lying on
that satisfies
Sydpoints exist precisely when
is a square in the field. There are in general two sydpoints, if they exist at all, but they are not perpendicular.
A construction of sydpoints
r and
s of
may be deduced from
Figure 7.
First construct , then the midpoints m and n of and then use the null points x and y lying on as shown.
Sydpoints work with midpoints to extend triangle geometry to triangles with vertices both inside and outside the null conic. In
Figure 8, we see centroids
g and circumlines
C of such a triangle. For the remarkable connection of the circumcenters
c to circles through the three points, see [
12].
10. Sydpoints and the Parabola
In [
18,
19], we defined the hyperbolic parabola
to be the locus of a point
(actually a conic) satisfying:
for fixed points
called the foci. Equivalently:
where
are the directrices. Note that the quadrance between a point and a line is defined in terms of the perpendicular transversal. Such a parabola is shown in red in
Figure 9.
In general, if we take duals of the tangents of a conic, we get a dual conic. It turns out that the dual of a parabola
is another parabola: the twin parabola
whose foci
,
are the sydpoints of the original foci pair
shown in orange in
Figure 10. Therefore, sydpoints appear prominently in the geometry of the parabola!
11. UHG over Finite Fields
Can midpoints and sydpoints exist together? The conditions that is a square and is a square are not simultaneously satisfied over our usual number system, or over a field where mod However, in the case of where mod then is a square, so both midpoints and sydpoints can exist together. This is an entirely new aspect of hyperbolic geometry that is invisible to us usually. However, how can we visualize UHG over a finite field?
Fortunately, a new and powerful program being developed by Michael Reynolds at University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney accomplishes exactly this. This program will hopefully be available for public use in the near future.
In fact, hyperbolic geometry over finite fields has been considered previously; see [
20,
21]. With UHG, we get a novel approach that unifies all these geometries over arbitrary fields, so freeing us from the reliance on a particular ideology with respect to the “continuum”.