Configurations (geometry)

Configuration (geometry)

In mathematics, specifically projective geometry, a configuration in the plane consists of a finite set of points, and a finite arrangement of lines, such that each point is incident to the same number of lines and each line is incident to the same number of points. Although certain specific configurations had been studied earlier (for instance by Thomas Kirkman in 1849), the formal study of configurations was first introduced by Theodor Reye in 1876, in the second edition of his book Geometrie der Lage, in the context of a discussion of Desargues' theorem. Ernst Steinitz wrote his dissertation on the subject in 1894, and they were popularized by Hilbert and Cohn-Vossen's 1932 book Anschauliche Geometrie, reprinted in English as . Configurations may be studied either as concrete sets of points and lines in a specific geometry, such as the Euclidean or projective planes (these are said to be realizable in that geometry), or as a type of abstract incidence geometry. In the latter case they are closely related to regular hypergraphs and biregular bipartite graphs, but with some additional restrictions: every two points of the incidence structure can be associated with at most one line, and every two lines can be associated with at most one point. That is, the girth of the corresponding bipartite graph (the Levi graph of the configuration) must be at least six. (Wikipedia).

Configuration (geometry)
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Related pages

European Journal of Combinatorics | Pappus configuration | Reye configuration | Complete quadrangle | Sylvester–Gallai theorem | Inflection point | Incidence (geometry) | Miquel configuration | Discrete Mathematics (journal) | Complex projective plane | Golomb ruler | Danzer's configuration | Cubic surface | Projective space | Fano plane | Regular graph | Perles configuration | Theodor Reye | David Hilbert | Möbius–Kantor configuration | Kummer configuration | SchlĂ€fli double six | Gray graph | Girth (graph theory) | Möbius configuration | Incidence structure | Incidence geometry | Klein configuration | Desargues configuration | Cremona–Richmond configuration | Point (geometry) | Bipartite graph | Mathematics | Hesse configuration | Levi graph | Thomas Kirkman | Polygon | Euclidean plane | Hypergraph | GrĂŒnbaum–Rigby configuration | Ars Mathematica Contemporanea | Complex number | Projective geometry | Projective plane | Triangle | Arrangement of lines | Ernst Steinitz | Biregular graph