Infinity | Hyperbolic geometry

Ideal point

In hyperbolic geometry, an ideal point, omega point or point at infinity is a well-defined point outside the hyperbolic plane or space.Given a line l and a point P not on l, right- and left-limiting parallels to l through P converge to l at ideal points. Unlike the projective case, ideal points form a boundary, not a submanifold. So, these lines do not intersect at an ideal point and such points, although well-defined, do not belong to the hyperbolic space itself. The ideal points together form the Cayley absolute or boundary of a hyperbolic geometry. For instance, the unit circle forms the Cayley absolute of the Poincaré disk model and the Klein disk model.While the real line forms the Cayley absolute of the Poincaré half-plane model . Pasch's axiom and the exterior angle theorem still hold for an omega triangle, defined by two points in hyperbolic space and an omega point. (Wikipedia).

Ideal point
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Full paper at https://www.cs.colorado.edu/~jbg/docs/2015_acl_teaparty.pdf

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Related pages

Hyperboloid model | Poincaré disk model | Exterior angle theorem | Perpendicular | Hyperbolic triangle | Horocycle | Ideal polyhedron | Unit circle | Hyperbolic geometry | Poincaré half-plane model | Convex polygon | Unit sphere | Quadrilateral | Pasch's axiom | Limiting parallel | Ideal triangle