neutral geometry (original) (raw)

Dedekind Cuts. Let ℓ be a line in a linear ordered geometry S and let A,B be two subsets on ℓ. A point p is said to be between A and B if for any pair of points q∈Aand r∈B, p is between q and r. Note that p necessarily lies on ℓ.

For example, given a ray ρ on a line ℓ. If p is the source of ρ, then p is a point between ρ and its opposite ray -ρ, regardless whether the ray is defined to be open or closed. It is easy to see that p is the unique point between ρ and -ρ.

Given a line ℓ, a Dedekind cut on ℓ is a pair of subsetsA,B⊆ℓ such that A∪B=ℓ and there is a unique point p between A and B. A ray ρ on a line ℓ and its compliment ρ¯ constitute a Dedekind cut onℓ.

If A,B form a Dedekind cut on ℓ, then A and B have two additional properties:

    1. no point on B is strictly between two points on A.

Conversely, if A,B satisfy the above two conditions, can we say that A and B constitute a Dedekind cut? In a neutral geometry, the answer is yes.

Neutral Geometry. A neutral geometry is a linear ordered geometry satisfying

    1. the continuity axiom: given any line ℓ with ℓ=A∪B such that
    2. (a)
      no point on A is (strictly) between two points on B, and
    3. (b)
      no point on B is (strictly) between two points on A.
      then A and B constitute a Dedekind cut on ℓ. In other words, there is a unique point o between A and B.

Clearly,A∩B contains at most one point. The continuity axiom is also known as Dedekind’s Axiom.

Properties.

    1. Let ℓ=A∪B be a line, satisfying (a) and (b) above and let p∈A. Suppose ρ lying on ℓ is a ray emanating from p. Then either ρ⊆A or B⊆ρ.
    1. Let ℓ=A∪B be a line, satisfying (a) and (b) above and let o be the unique point as mentioned above. Then aclosed ray emanating from o is either A or B. This implies that every Dedekind cut on a lineℓ consists of at least one ray.
    1. We can similarly propose a continuity axiom on a ray as follows: given any ray ρ with ρ=A∪B such that

    • no point on A is strictly between two points on B, and

    • no point on B is strictly between two points on A.
      then there is a unique point o on ρ between A and B. It turns out that the two continuity axioms are equivalentMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmathPlanetmath.
    1. Archimedean Property Given two line segmentsMathworldPlanetmath p⁢q¯ and r⁢s¯, then there is a unique natural numberMathworldPlanetmath n and a unique point t, such that
    2. (a)
      t lies on the line segment n⋅r⁢s¯⊆r⁢s→,
    3. (b)
      t does not lie on the line segment(n-1)⋅r⁢s¯, and
    4. (c)
      p⁢q¯≅r⁢t¯.
      This property usually appears in the study of ordered fields.
    1. For any given line ℓ and any point p, there exists a line m passing through p that is perpendicularPlanetmathPlanetmath to ℓ.
    1. Consequently, for any given line ℓ and any point p not lying on ℓ, there exists at leaast one line passing through p that is parallelMathworldPlanetmathPlanetmath to ℓ. If there is more than one line passing through p parallel to ℓ, then there are infinitely many of these lines.

Examples.

Title neutral geometry
Canonical name NeutralGeometry
Date of creation 2013-03-22 15:33:49
Last modified on 2013-03-22 15:33:49
Owner CWoo (3771)
Last modified by CWoo (3771)
Numerical id 9
Author CWoo (3771)
Entry type Definition
Classification msc 51F10
Classification msc 51F05
Synonym absolute geometry
Synonym Dedekind axiom
Defines hyperbolic axiom
Defines Bolyai-Lobachevsky geometry
Defines continuity axiom
Defines categorical