projective plane - définition. Qu'est-ce que projective plane
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est projective plane - définition

GEOMETRIC CONCEPT OF A 2D SPACE WITH A "POINT AT INFINITY" ADJOINED
Desarguesian plane; Desargues plane; Projective Plane; Finite projective plane; Baer subplane
  • (Non-empty) degenerate projective planes
  • The ''Moulton plane''. Lines sloping down and to the right are bent where they cross the ''y''-axis.
  • These parallel lines appear to intersect in the [[vanishing point]] "at infinity". In a projective plane this is actually true.

projective plane         
<mathematics> The space of equivalence classes of vectors under non-zero scalar multiplication. Elements are sets of the form kv: k != 0, k scalar, v != O, v a vector where O is the origin. v is a representative member of this equivalence class. The projective plane of a vector space is the collection of its 1-dimensional subspaces. The properties of the vector space induce a topology and notions of smoothness on the projective plane. A projective plane is in no meaningful sense a plane and would therefore be (but isn't) better described as a "projective space". (1996-09-28)
Projective plane         
In mathematics, a projective plane is a geometric structure that extends the concept of a plane. In the ordinary Euclidean plane, two lines typically intersect in a single point, but there are some pairs of lines (namely, parallel lines) that do not intersect.
Smooth projective plane         
Draft:Smooth projective planes; Smooth projective planes
In geometry, smooth projective planes are special projective planes. The most prominent example of a smooth projective plane is the real projective plane {\mathcal E}.

Wikipédia

Projective plane

In mathematics, a projective plane is a geometric structure that extends the concept of a plane. In the ordinary Euclidean plane, two lines typically intersect in a single point, but there are some pairs of lines (namely, parallel lines) that do not intersect. A projective plane can be thought of as an ordinary plane equipped with additional "points at infinity" where parallel lines intersect. Thus any two distinct lines in a projective plane intersect at exactly one point.

Renaissance artists, in developing the techniques of drawing in perspective, laid the groundwork for this mathematical topic. The archetypical example is the real projective plane, also known as the extended Euclidean plane. This example, in slightly different guises, is important in algebraic geometry, topology and projective geometry where it may be denoted variously by PG(2, R), RP2, or P2(R), among other notations. There are many other projective planes, both infinite, such as the complex projective plane, and finite, such as the Fano plane.

A projective plane is a 2-dimensional projective space, but not all projective planes can be embedded in 3-dimensional projective spaces. Such embeddability is a consequence of a property known as Desargues' theorem, not shared by all projective planes.