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Journal ArticleDOI

Clifford parallelism: old and new definitions, and their use

Dieter Betten, +1 more
- 27 Jun 2012 - 
- Vol. 103, Iss: 1, pp 31-73
TLDR
In this paper, the concept of Clifford parallelism was introduced, which consists of all regular spreads of the real projective 3-space whose focal lines form a regulus contained in an imaginary quadric (D1 = Klein's definition).
Abstract
Parallelity in the real elliptic 3-space was defined by W. K. Clifford in 1873 and by F. Klein in 1890; we compare the two concepts. A Clifford parallelism consists of all regular spreads of the real projective 3-space $${{\rm PG}(3,\mathbb{R})}$$ whose (complex) focal lines (=directrices) form a regulus contained in an imaginary quadric (D1 = Klein’s definition). Our new access to the topic ‘Clifford parallelism’ is free of complexification and involves Klein’s correspondence λ of line geometry together with a bijective map γ from all regular spreads of $${{\rm PG}(3,\mathbb{R})}$$ onto those lines of $${{\rm PG}(5,\mathbb{R})}$$ having no common point with the Klein quadric; a regular parallelism P of $${{\rm PG}(3,\mathbb{R})}$$ is Clifford, if the spreads of P are mapped by γ onto a plane of lines (D2 = planarity definition). We prove the equivalence of (D1) and (D2). Associated with γ is a simple dimension concept for regular parallelisms which allows us to say instead of (D2): the 2-dimensional regular parallelisms of $${{\rm PG}(3,\mathbb{R})}$$ are Clifford (D3 = dimensionality definition). Submission of (D2) to λ−1 yields a complexification free definition of a Clifford parallelism which uses only elements of $${{\rm PG}(3,\mathbb{R})}$$ : A regular parallelism P is Clifford, if the union of any two distinct spreads of P is contained in a general linear complex of lines (D4 = line geometric definition). In order to see (D1) and (D2) simultaneously at work we discuss the following two examples using, at the one hand, complexification and (D1) and, at the other hand, (D2) under avoidance of complexification. Example 1. In the projectively extended real Euclidean 3-space a rotational regular spread with center o is submitted to the group of all rotations about o; we prove, that a Clifford parallelism is generated. Example 2. We determine the group $${Aut_e({\bf P}_{\bf C})}$$ of all automorphic collineations and dualities of the Clifford parallelism P C and show $${Aut_e({\bf P}_{\bf C})\hspace{1.5mm} \cong ({\rm SO}_3\mathbb{R} \times {\rm SO}_3\mathbb{R})\rtimes \mathbb{Z}_2}$$ .

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A note on Clifford parallelisms in characteristic two

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that a purely inseparable field extension L/F with some extra property and degree [L : F] = 4 determines a Clifford parallelism on the set of lines of the three-dimensional projective space over F.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variations on a theme: Clifford’s parallelism in elliptic space

TL;DR: In 1873, W K Clifford introduced a notion of parallelism in the three-dimensional elliptic space that, quite surprisingly, exhibits almost all properties of Euclidean parallelism as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pencilled regular parallelisms

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of pencilled line sets with respect to the Klein quadric was shown to be an algebraic condition for hyperflock determining line sets (hfd line sets).
Journal ArticleDOI

Clifford parallelisms defined by octonions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define (left and right) Clifford parallelisms on a seven-dimensional projective space algebraically, using an octonion division algebra, and determine the automorphism groups of these parallelisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clifford Parallelisms and External Planes to the Klein quadric

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors established a one-one correspondence between the Clifford parallelisms of projective spaces and those planes of the Klein quadric representing the lines of the projective space.
References
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