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Five points determine a conic

In Euclidean and projective geometry, five points determine a conic (a degree-2 plane curve), just as two (distinct) points determine a line (a degree-1 plane curve). There are additional subtleties for conics that do not exist for lines, and thus the statement and its proof for conics are both more technical than for lines.

Formally, given any five points in the plane in general linear position, meaning no three collinear, there is a unique conic passing through them, which will be non-degenerate; this is true over both the Euclidean plane and any pappian projective plane. Indeed, given any five points there is a conic passing through them, but if three of the points are collinear the conic will be degenerate (reducible, because it contains a line), and may not be unique; see further discussion.

Proofs edit

This result can be proven numerous different ways; the dimension counting argument is most direct, and generalizes to higher degree, while other proofs are special to conics.

Dimension counting edit

Intuitively, passing through five points in general linear position specifies five independent linear constraints on the (projective) linear space of conics, and hence specifies a unique conic, though this brief statement ignores subtleties.

More precisely, this is seen as follows:

  • conics correspond to points in the five-dimensional projective space  
  • requiring a conic to pass through a point imposes a linear condition on the coordinates: for a fixed   the equation   is a linear equation in  
  • by dimension counting, five constraints (that the curve passes through five points) are necessary to specify a conic, as each constraint cuts the dimension of possibilities by 1, and one starts with 5 dimensions;
  • in 5 dimensions, the intersection of 5 (independent) hyperplanes is a single point (formally, by Bézout's theorem);
  • general linear position of the points means that the constraints are independent, and thus do specify a unique conic;
  • the resulting conic is non-degenerate because it is a curve (since it has more than 1 point), and does not contain a line (else it would split as two lines, at least one of which must contain 3 of the 5 points, by the pigeonhole principle), so it is irreducible.

The two subtleties in the above analysis are that the resulting point is a quadratic equation (not a linear equation), and that the constraints are independent. The first is simple: if A, B, and C all vanish, then the equation   defines a line, and any 3 points on this (indeed any number of points) lie on a line – thus general linear position ensures a conic. The second, that the constraints are independent, is significantly subtler: it corresponds to the fact that given five points in general linear position in the plane, their images in   under the Veronese map are in general linear position, which is true because the Veronese map is biregular: i.e., if the image of five points satisfy a relation, then the relation can be pulled back and the original points must also satisfy a relation. The Veronese map has coordinates   and the target   is dual to the     of conics. The Veronese map corresponds to "evaluation of a conic at a point", and the statement about independence of constraints is exactly a geometric statement about this map.

Synthetic proof edit

That five points determine a conic can be proven by synthetic geometry—i.e., in terms of lines and points in the plane—in addition to the analytic (algebraic) proof given above. Such a proof can be given using a theorem of Jakob Steiner,[1] which states:

Given a projective transformation f, between the pencil of lines passing through a point X and the pencil of lines passing through a point Y, the set C of intersection points between a line x and its image   forms a conic.
Note that X and Y are on this conic by considering the preimage and image of the line XY (which is respectively a line through X and a line through Y).

This can be shown by taking the points X and Y to the standard points   and   by a projective transformation, in which case the pencils of lines correspond to the horizontal and vertical lines in the plane, and the intersections of corresponding lines to the graph of a function, which (must be shown) is a hyperbola, hence a conic, hence the original curve C is a conic.

Now given five points X, Y, A, B, C, the three lines   can be taken to the three lines   by a unique projective transform, since projective transforms are simply 3-transitive on lines (they are simply 3-transitive on points, hence by projective duality they are 3-transitive on lines). Under this map X maps to Y, since these are the unique intersection points of these lines, and thus satisfy the hypothesis of Steiner’s theorem. The resulting conic thus contains all five points, and is the unique such conic, as desired.

 
Parabola construction, given five points

Construction edit

Given five points, one can construct the conic containing them in various ways.

Analytically, given the coordinates   of the five points, the equation for the conic can be found by linear algebra, by writing and solving the five equations in the coefficients, substituting the variables with the values of the coordinates: five equations, six unknowns, but homogeneous so scaling removes one dimension; concretely, setting one of the coefficients to 1 accomplishes this.

This can be achieved quite directly as the following determinantal equation:

 

This matrix has variables in its first row and numbers in all other rows, so the determinant is visibly a linear combination of the six monomials of degree at most 2. Also, the resulting polynomial clearly vanishes at the five input points (when  ), as the matrix has then a repeated row.

Synthetically, the conic can be constructed by the Braikenridge–Maclaurin construction,[2][3][4][5] by applying the Braikenridge–Maclaurin theorem, which is the converse of Pascal's theorem. Pascal's theorem states that given 6 points on a conic (a hexagon), the lines defined by opposite sides intersect in three collinear points. This can be reversed to construct the possible locations for a 6th point, given 5 existing ones.

Generalizations edit

The natural generalization is to ask for what value of k a configuration of k points (in general position) in n-space determines a variety of degree d and dimension m, which is a fundamental question in enumerative geometry.

A simple case of this is for a hypersurface (a codimension 1 subvariety, the zeros of a single polynomial, the case  ), of which plane curves are an example.

In the case of a hypersurface, the answer is given in terms of the multiset coefficient, more familiarly the binomial coefficient, or more elegantly the rising factorial, as:

 

This is via the analogous analysis of the Veronese map: k points in general position impose k independent linear conditions on a variety (because the Veronese map is biregular), and the number of monomials of degree d in   variables (n-dimensional projective space has   homogeneous coordinates) is   from which 1 is subtracted because of projectivization: multiplying a polynomial by a constant does not change its zeros.

In the above formula, the number of points k is a polynomial in d of degree n, with leading coefficient  

In the case of plane curves, where   the formula becomes:

 

whose values for   are   – there are no curves of degree 0 (a single point is a point and is thus determined by a point, which is codimension 2), 2 points determine a line, 5 points determine a conic, 9 points determine a cubic, 14 points determine a quartic, and so forth.

Related results edit

While five points determine a conic, sets of six or more points on a conic are not in general position, that is, they are constrained as is demonstrated in Pascal's theorem.

Similarly, while nine points determine a cubic, if the nine points lie on more than one cubic—i.e., they are the intersection of two cubics—then they are not in general position, and indeed satisfy an addition constraint, as stated in the Cayley–Bacharach theorem.

Four points do not determine a conic, but rather a pencil, the 1-dimensional linear system of conics which all pass through the four points (formally, have the four points as base locus). Similarly, three points determine a 2-dimensional linear system (net), two points determine a 3-dimensional linear system (web), one point determines a 4-dimensional linear system, and zero points place no constraints on the 5-dimensional linear system of all conics.

 
The Apollonian circles are two 1-parameter families determined by 2 points.

As is well known, three non-collinear points determine a circle in Euclidean geometry and two distinct points determine a pencil of circles such as the Apollonian circles. These results seem to run counter the general result since circles are special cases of conics. However, in a pappian projective plane a conic is a circle only if it passes through two specific points on the line at infinity, so a circle is determined by five non-collinear points, three in the affine plane and these two special points. Similar considerations explain the smaller than expected number of points needed to define pencils of circles.

Tangency edit

Instead of passing through points, a different condition on a curve is being tangent to a given line. Being tangent to five given lines also determines a conic, by projective duality, but from the algebraic point of view tangency to a line is a quadratic constraint, so naive dimension counting yields 25 = 32 conics tangent to five given lines, of which 31 must be ascribed to degenerate conics, as described in fudge factors in enumerative geometry; formalizing this intuition requires significant further development to justify.

Another classic problem in enumerative geometry, of similar vintage to conics, is the Problem of Apollonius: a circle that is tangent to three circles in general determines eight circles, as each of these is a quadratic condition and 23 = 8. As a question in real geometry, a full analysis involves many special cases, and the actual number of circles may be any number between 0 and 8, except for 7.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Interactive Course on Projective Geometry 2017-11-27 at the Wayback Machine, Chapter Five: The Projective Geometry of Conics 2017-12-22 at the Wayback Machine: Section Four: Conics on the real projective plane 2018-04-24 at the Wayback Machine, by J.C. Álvarez Paiva; proof follows Exercise 4.6
  2. ^ (Coxeter 1961, pp. 252–254)
  3. ^ The Animated Pascal, Sandra Lach Arlinghaus
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Braikenridge-Maclaurin Construction." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Braikenridge-MaclaurinConstruction.html
  5. ^ The GNU 3DLDF Conic Sections Page: Pascal's Theorem and the Braikenridge-Maclaurin Construction, Laurence D. Finston
  • Coxeter, H. S. M. (1961), Introduction to Geometry, Washington, DC{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Coxeter, H. S. M.; Greitzer, S. L. (1967), Geometry Revisited, Washington, DC: Mathematical Association of America, p. 76
  • Dixon, A. C. (March 1908), "The Conic through Five Given Points", The Mathematical Gazette, 4 (70), The Mathematical Association: 228–230, doi:10.2307/3605147, JSTOR 3605147, S2CID 125356690

External links edit

  • Five Points Determine a Conic Section, Wolfram interactive demonstration

five, points, determine, conic, euclidean, projective, geometry, five, points, determine, conic, degree, plane, curve, just, distinct, points, determine, line, degree, plane, curve, there, additional, subtleties, conics, that, exist, lines, thus, statement, pr. In Euclidean and projective geometry five points determine a conic a degree 2 plane curve just as two distinct points determine a line a degree 1 plane curve There are additional subtleties for conics that do not exist for lines and thus the statement and its proof for conics are both more technical than for lines Formally given any five points in the plane in general linear position meaning no three collinear there is a unique conic passing through them which will be non degenerate this is true over both the Euclidean plane and any pappian projective plane Indeed given any five points there is a conic passing through them but if three of the points are collinear the conic will be degenerate reducible because it contains a line and may not be unique see further discussion Contents 1 Proofs 1 1 Dimension counting 1 2 Synthetic proof 2 Construction 3 Generalizations 4 Related results 4 1 Tangency 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksProofs editThis result can be proven numerous different ways the dimension counting argument is most direct and generalizes to higher degree while other proofs are special to conics Dimension counting edit Intuitively passing through five points in general linear position specifies five independent linear constraints on the projective linear space of conics and hence specifies a unique conic though this brief statement ignores subtleties More precisely this is seen as follows conics correspond to points in the five dimensional projective space P 5 displaystyle mathbf P 5 nbsp requiring a conic to pass through a point imposes a linear condition on the coordinates for a fixed x y displaystyle x y nbsp the equation A x 2 B x y C y 2 D x E y F 0 displaystyle Ax 2 Bxy Cy 2 Dx Ey F 0 nbsp is a linear equation in A B C D E F displaystyle A B C D E F nbsp by dimension counting five constraints that the curve passes through five points are necessary to specify a conic as each constraint cuts the dimension of possibilities by 1 and one starts with 5 dimensions in 5 dimensions the intersection of 5 independent hyperplanes is a single point formally by Bezout s theorem general linear position of the points means that the constraints are independent and thus do specify a unique conic the resulting conic is non degenerate because it is a curve since it has more than 1 point and does not contain a line else it would split as two lines at least one of which must contain 3 of the 5 points by the pigeonhole principle so it is irreducible The two subtleties in the above analysis are that the resulting point is a quadratic equation not a linear equation and that the constraints are independent The first is simple if A B and C all vanish then the equation D x E y F 0 displaystyle Dx Ey F 0 nbsp defines a line and any 3 points on this indeed any number of points lie on a line thus general linear position ensures a conic The second that the constraints are independent is significantly subtler it corresponds to the fact that given five points in general linear position in the plane their images in P 5 displaystyle mathbf P 5 nbsp under the Veronese map are in general linear position which is true because the Veronese map is biregular i e if the image of five points satisfy a relation then the relation can be pulled back and the original points must also satisfy a relation The Veronese map has coordinates x 2 x y y 2 x z y z z 2 displaystyle x 2 xy y 2 xz yz z 2 nbsp and the target P 5 displaystyle mathbf P 5 nbsp is dual to the A B C D E F displaystyle A B C D E F nbsp P 5 displaystyle mathbf P 5 nbsp of conics The Veronese map corresponds to evaluation of a conic at a point and the statement about independence of constraints is exactly a geometric statement about this map Synthetic proof edit That five points determine a conic can be proven by synthetic geometry i e in terms of lines and points in the plane in addition to the analytic algebraic proof given above Such a proof can be given using a theorem of Jakob Steiner 1 which states Given a projective transformation f between the pencil of lines passing through a point X and the pencil of lines passing through a point Y the set C of intersection points between a line x and its image f x displaystyle f x nbsp forms a conic Note that X and Y are on this conic by considering the preimage and image of the line XY which is respectively a line through X and a line through Y dd This can be shown by taking the points X and Y to the standard points 1 0 0 displaystyle 1 0 0 nbsp and 0 1 0 displaystyle 0 1 0 nbsp by a projective transformation in which case the pencils of lines correspond to the horizontal and vertical lines in the plane and the intersections of corresponding lines to the graph of a function which must be shown is a hyperbola hence a conic hence the original curve C is a conic Now given five points X Y A B C the three lines X A X B X C displaystyle XA XB XC nbsp can be taken to the three lines Y A Y B Y C displaystyle YA YB YC nbsp by a unique projective transform since projective transforms are simply 3 transitive on lines they are simply 3 transitive on points hence by projective duality they are 3 transitive on lines Under this map X maps to Y since these are the unique intersection points of these lines and thus satisfy the hypothesis of Steiner s theorem The resulting conic thus contains all five points and is the unique such conic as desired nbsp Parabola construction given five pointsConstruction editGiven five points one can construct the conic containing them in various ways Analytically given the coordinates x i y i i 1 2 3 4 5 displaystyle x i y i i 1 2 3 4 5 nbsp of the five points the equation for the conic can be found by linear algebra by writing and solving the five equations in the coefficients substituting the variables with the values of the coordinates five equations six unknowns but homogeneous so scaling removes one dimension concretely setting one of the coefficients to 1 accomplishes this This can be achieved quite directly as the following determinantal equation det x 2 x y y 2 x y 1 x 1 2 x 1 y 1 y 1 2 x 1 y 1 1 x 2 2 x 2 y 2 y 2 2 x 2 y 2 1 x 3 2 x 3 y 3 y 3 2 x 3 y 3 1 x 4 2 x 4 y 4 y 4 2 x 4 y 4 1 x 5 2 x 5 y 5 y 5 2 x 5 y 5 1 0 displaystyle det begin bmatrix x 2 amp xy amp y 2 amp x amp y amp 1 x 1 2 amp x 1 y 1 amp y 1 2 amp x 1 amp y 1 amp 1 x 2 2 amp x 2 y 2 amp y 2 2 amp x 2 amp y 2 amp 1 x 3 2 amp x 3 y 3 amp y 3 2 amp x 3 amp y 3 amp 1 x 4 2 amp x 4 y 4 amp y 4 2 amp x 4 amp y 4 amp 1 x 5 2 amp x 5 y 5 amp y 5 2 amp x 5 amp y 5 amp 1 end bmatrix 0 nbsp This matrix has variables in its first row and numbers in all other rows so the determinant is visibly a linear combination of the six monomials of degree at most 2 Also the resulting polynomial clearly vanishes at the five input points when x y x i y i displaystyle x y x i y i nbsp as the matrix has then a repeated row Synthetically the conic can be constructed by the Braikenridge Maclaurin construction 2 3 4 5 by applying the Braikenridge Maclaurin theorem which is the converse of Pascal s theorem Pascal s theorem states that given 6 points on a conic a hexagon the lines defined by opposite sides intersect in three collinear points This can be reversed to construct the possible locations for a 6th point given 5 existing ones Generalizations editThe natural generalization is to ask for what value of k a configuration of k points in general position in n space determines a variety of degree d and dimension m which is a fundamental question in enumerative geometry A simple case of this is for a hypersurface a codimension 1 subvariety the zeros of a single polynomial the case m n 1 displaystyle m n 1 nbsp of which plane curves are an example In the case of a hypersurface the answer is given in terms of the multiset coefficient more familiarly the binomial coefficient or more elegantly the rising factorial as k n 1 d 1 n d d 1 1 n d 1 n 1 displaystyle k left n 1 choose d right 1 n d choose d 1 frac 1 n d 1 n 1 nbsp This is via the analogous analysis of the Veronese map k points in general position impose k independent linear conditions on a variety because the Veronese map is biregular and the number of monomials of degree d in n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp variables n dimensional projective space has n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp homogeneous coordinates is n 1 d displaystyle textstyle left n 1 choose d right nbsp from which 1 is subtracted because of projectivization multiplying a polynomial by a constant does not change its zeros In the above formula the number of points k is a polynomial in d of degree n with leading coefficient 1 n displaystyle 1 n nbsp In the case of plane curves where n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp the formula becomes 1 2 d 1 d 2 1 1 2 d 2 3 d displaystyle textstyle frac 1 2 d 1 d 2 1 textstyle frac 1 2 d 2 3d nbsp whose values for d 0 1 2 3 4 displaystyle d 0 1 2 3 4 nbsp are 0 2 5 9 14 displaystyle 0 2 5 9 14 nbsp there are no curves of degree 0 a single point is a point and is thus determined by a point which is codimension 2 2 points determine a line 5 points determine a conic 9 points determine a cubic 14 points determine a quartic and so forth Related results editWhile five points determine a conic sets of six or more points on a conic are not in general position that is they are constrained as is demonstrated in Pascal s theorem Similarly while nine points determine a cubic if the nine points lie on more than one cubic i e they are the intersection of two cubics then they are not in general position and indeed satisfy an addition constraint as stated in the Cayley Bacharach theorem Four points do not determine a conic but rather a pencil the 1 dimensional linear system of conics which all pass through the four points formally have the four points as base locus Similarly three points determine a 2 dimensional linear system net two points determine a 3 dimensional linear system web one point determines a 4 dimensional linear system and zero points place no constraints on the 5 dimensional linear system of all conics nbsp The Apollonian circles are two 1 parameter families determined by 2 points As is well known three non collinear points determine a circle in Euclidean geometry and two distinct points determine a pencil of circles such as the Apollonian circles These results seem to run counter the general result since circles are special cases of conics However in a pappian projective plane a conic is a circle only if it passes through two specific points on the line at infinity so a circle is determined by five non collinear points three in the affine plane and these two special points Similar considerations explain the smaller than expected number of points needed to define pencils of circles Tangency edit Instead of passing through points a different condition on a curve is being tangent to a given line Being tangent to five given lines also determines a conic by projective duality but from the algebraic point of view tangency to a line is a quadratic constraint so naive dimension counting yields 25 32 conics tangent to five given lines of which 31 must be ascribed to degenerate conics as described in fudge factors in enumerative geometry formalizing this intuition requires significant further development to justify Another classic problem in enumerative geometry of similar vintage to conics is the Problem of Apollonius a circle that is tangent to three circles in general determines eight circles as each of these is a quadratic condition and 23 8 As a question in real geometry a full analysis involves many special cases and the actual number of circles may be any number between 0 and 8 except for 7 See also editCramer s theorem algebraic curves for a generalization to n th degree planar curvesReferences edit Interactive Course on Projective Geometry Archived 2017 11 27 at the Wayback Machine Chapter Five The Projective Geometry of Conics Archived 2017 12 22 at the Wayback Machine Section Four Conics on the real projective plane Archived 2018 04 24 at the Wayback Machine by J C Alvarez Paiva proof follows Exercise 4 6 Coxeter 1961 pp 252 254 The Animated Pascal Sandra Lach Arlinghaus Weisstein Eric W Braikenridge Maclaurin Construction From MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource http mathworld wolfram com Braikenridge MaclaurinConstruction html The GNU 3DLDF Conic Sections Page Pascal s Theorem and the Braikenridge Maclaurin Construction Laurence D Finston Coxeter H S M 1961 Introduction to Geometry Washington DC a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Coxeter H S M Greitzer S L 1967 Geometry Revisited Washington DC Mathematical Association of America p 76 Dixon A C March 1908 The Conic through Five Given Points The Mathematical Gazette 4 70 The Mathematical Association 228 230 doi 10 2307 3605147 JSTOR 3605147 S2CID 125356690External links editFive Points Determine a Conic Section Wolfram interactive demonstration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Five points determine a conic amp oldid 1176646635 Braikenridge Maclaurin construction, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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