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Klein quartic

In hyperbolic geometry, the Klein quartic, named after Felix Klein, is a compact Riemann surface of genus 3 with the highest possible order automorphism group for this genus, namely order 168 orientation-preserving automorphisms, and 168 × 2 = 336 automorphisms if orientation may be reversed. As such, the Klein quartic is the Hurwitz surface of lowest possible genus; see Hurwitz's automorphisms theorem. Its (orientation-preserving) automorphism group is isomorphic to PSL(2, 7), the second-smallest non-abelian simple group after the alternating group A5. The quartic was first described in (Klein 1878b).

The Klein quartic is a quotient of the order-7 triangular tiling.
Dually, the Klein quartic is a quotient of the dual tiling, the order-3 heptagonal tiling.

Klein's quartic occurs in many branches of mathematics, in contexts including representation theory, homology theory, octonion multiplication[citation needed], Fermat's Last Theorem, and the Stark–Heegner theorem on imaginary quadratic number fields of class number one; see (Levy 1999) for a survey of properties.

Originally, the "Klein quartic" referred specifically to the subset of the complex projective plane P2(C) defined by an algebraic equation. This has a specific Riemannian metric (that makes it a minimal surface in P2(C)), under which its Gaussian curvature is not constant. But more commonly (as in this article) it is now thought of as any Riemann surface that is conformally equivalent to this algebraic curve, and especially the one that is a quotient of the hyperbolic plane H2 by a certain cocompact group G that acts freely on H2 by isometries. This gives the Klein quartic a Riemannian metric of constant curvature −1 that it inherits from H2. This set of conformally equivalent Riemannian surfaces is precisely the same as all compact Riemannian surfaces of genus 3 whose conformal automorphism group is isomorphic to the unique simple group of order 168. This group is also known as PSL(2, 7), and also as the isomorphic group PSL(3, 2). By covering space theory, the group G mentioned above is isomorphic to the fundamental group of the compact surface of genus 3.

Closed and open forms

It is important to distinguish two different forms of the quartic. The closed quartic is what is generally meant in geometry; topologically it has genus 3 and is a compact space. The open or "punctured" quartic is of interest in number theory; topologically it is a genus 3 surface with 24 punctures, and geometrically these punctures are cusps. The open quartic may be obtained (topologically) from the closed quartic by puncturing at the 24 centers of the tiling by regular heptagons, as discussed below. The open and closed quartics have different metrics, though they are both hyperbolic and complete[1] – geometrically, the cusps are "points at infinity", not holes, hence the open quartic is still complete.

As an algebraic curve

The Klein quartic can be viewed as a projective algebraic curve over the complex numbers C, defined by the following quartic equation in homogeneous coordinates [x:y:z] on P2(C):

 

The locus of this equation in P2(C) is the original Riemannian surface that Klein described.

Quaternion algebra construction

The compact Klein quartic can be constructed as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by the action of a suitable Fuchsian group Γ(I) which is the principal congruence subgroup associated with the ideal   in the ring of algebraic integers Z(η) of the field Q(η) where η = 2 cos(2π/7). Note the identity

 

exhibiting 2 – η as a prime factor of 7 in the ring of algebraic integers.

The group Γ(I) is a subgroup of the (2,3,7) hyperbolic triangle group. Namely, Γ(I) is a subgroup of the group of elements of unit norm in the quaternion algebra generated as an associative algebra by the generators i,j and relations

 

One chooses a suitable Hurwitz quaternion order   in the quaternion algebra, Γ(I) is then the group of norm 1 elements in  . The least absolute value of a trace of a hyperbolic element in Γ(I) is  , corresponding the value 3.936 for the systole of the Klein quartic, one of the highest in this genus.

Tiling

 
The tiling of the quartic by reflection domains is a quotient of the 3-7 kisrhombille.

The Klein quartic admits tilings connected with the symmetry group (a "regular map"[2]), and these are used in understanding the symmetry group, dating back to Klein's original paper. Given a fundamental domain for the group action (for the full, orientation-reversing symmetry group, a (2,3,7) triangle), the reflection domains (images of this domain under the group) give a tiling of the quartic such that the automorphism group of the tiling equals the automorphism group of the surface – reflections in the lines of the tiling correspond to the reflections in the group (reflections in the lines of a given fundamental triangle give a set of 3 generating reflections). This tiling is a quotient of the order-3 bisected heptagonal tiling of the hyperbolic plane (the universal cover of the quartic), and all Hurwitz surfaces are tiled in the same way, as quotients.

This tiling is uniform but not regular (it is by scalene triangles), and often regular tilings are used instead. A quotient of any tiling in the (2,3,7) family can be used (and will have the same automorphism group); of these, the two regular tilings are the tiling by 24 regular hyperbolic heptagons, each of degree 3 (meeting at 56 vertices), and the dual tiling by 56 equilateral triangles, each of degree 7 (meeting at 24 vertices). The order of the automorphism group is related, being the number of polygons times the number of edges in the polygon in both cases.

24 × 7 = 168
56 × 3 = 168

The covering tilings on the hyperbolic plane are the order-3 heptagonal tiling and the order-7 triangular tiling.

The automorphism group can be augmented (by a symmetry which is not realized by a symmetry of the tiling) to yield the Mathieu group M24.[3]

Corresponding to each tiling of the quartic (partition of the quartic variety into subsets) is an abstract polyhedron, which abstracts from the geometry and only reflects the combinatorics of the tiling (this is a general way of obtaining an abstract polytope from a tiling) – the vertices, edges, and faces of the polyhedron are equal as sets to the vertices, edges, and faces of the tiling, with the same incidence relations, and the (combinatorial) automorphism group of the abstract polyhedron equals the (geometric) automorphism group of the quartic. In this way the geometry reduces to combinatorics.

Affine quartic

The above is a tiling of the projective quartic (a closed manifold); the affine quartic has 24 cusps (topologically, punctures), which correspond to the 24 vertices of the regular triangular tiling, or equivalently the centers of the 24 heptagons in the heptagonal tiling, and can be realized as follows.

Considering the action of SL(2, R) on the upper half-plane model H2 of the hyperbolic plane by Möbius transformations, the affine Klein quartic can be realized as the quotient Γ(7)\H2. (Here Γ(7) is the congruence subgroup of SL(2, Z) consisting of matrices that are congruent to the identity matrix when all entries are taken modulo 7.)

Fundamental domain and pants decomposition

The Klein quartic can be obtained as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by the action of a Fuchsian group. The fundamental domain is a regular 14-gon, which has area   by the Gauss-Bonnet theorem. This can be seen in the adjoining figure, which also includes the 336 (2,3,7) triangles that tessellate the surface and generate its group of symmetries.

 
The fundamental domain of the Klein quartic. The surface is obtained by associating sides with equal numbers.

Within the tessellation by (2,3,7) triangles is a tessellation by 24 regular heptagons. The systole of the surface passes through the midpoints of 8 heptagon sides; for this reason it has been referred to as an "eight step geodesic" in the literature, and is the reason for the title of the book in the section below. All the coloured curves in the figure showing the pants decomposition are systoles, however, this is just a subset; there are 21 in total. The length of the systole is

 

An equivalent closed formula is

 

Whilst the Klein quartic maximises the symmetry group for surfaces of genus 3, it does not maximise the systole length. The conjectured maximiser is the surface referred to as "M3" (Schmutz 1993). M3 comes from a tessellation of (2,3,12) triangles, and its systole has multiplicity 24 and length

 
 
A pants decomposition of the Klein quartic. The figure on the left shows the boundary geodesics in the (2,3,7) tessellation of the fundamental domain. In the figure to the right, the pants have each been coloured differently to make it clear which part of the fundamental domain belongs to which pair of pants.

The Klein quartic can be decomposed into four pairs of pants by cutting along six of its systoles. This decomposition gives a symmetric set of Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates, where the length parameters are all equal to the length of the systole, and the twist parameters are all equal to   of the length of the systole. In particular, taking   to be the systole length, the coordinates are

 

The cubic graph corresponding to this pants decomposition is the tetrahedral graph, that is, the graph of 4 nodes, each connected to the other 3. The tetrahedral graph is similar to the graph for the projective Fano plane; indeed, the automorphism group of the Klein quartic is isomorphic to that of the Fano plane.

Spectral theory

 
The eight functions corresponding to the first positive eigenvalue of the Klein quartic. The functions are zero along the light blue lines. These plots were produced in FreeFEM++.

Little has been proved about the spectral theory of the Klein quartic. Because the Klein quartic has the largest symmetry group of surfaces in its topological class, much like the Bolza surface in genus 2, it has been conjectured that it maximises the first positive eigenvalue of the Laplace operator among all compact Riemann surfaces of genus 3 with constant negative curvature. It also maximizes mutliplicity of the first positive eigenvalue (8) among all such surfaces, a fact that has been recently proved.[4] Eigenvalues of the Klein quartic have been calculated to varying degrees of accuracy. The first 15 distinct positive eigenvalues are shown in the following table, along with their multiplicities.

Numerical computations of the first 15 positive eigenvalues of the Klein quartic
Eigenvalue Numerical value Multiplicity
  0 1
  2.67793 8
  6.62251 7
  10.8691 6
  12.1844 8
  17.2486 7
  21.9705 7
  24.0811 8
  25.9276 6
  30.8039 6
  36.4555 8
  37.4246 8
  41.5131 6
  44.8884 8
  49.0429 6
  50.6283 6

3-dimensional models

 
An animation by Greg Egan showing an embedding of Klein’s Quartic Curve in three dimensions, starting in a form that has the symmetries of a tetrahedron, and turning inside out to demonstrate a further symmetry.

The Klein quartic cannot be realized as a 3-dimensional figure, in the sense that no 3-dimensional figure has (rotational) symmetries equal to PSL(2,7), since PSL(2,7) does not embed as a subgroup of SO(3) (or O(3)) – it does not have a (non-trivial) 3-dimensional linear representation over the real numbers.

However, many 3-dimensional models of the Klein quartic have been given, starting in Klein's original paper,[2][5][6][7][8] which seek to demonstrate features of the quartic and preserve the symmetries topologically, though not all geometrically. The resulting models most often have either tetrahedral (order 12) or octahedral (order 24) symmetries; the remaining order 7 symmetry cannot be as easily visualized, and in fact is the title of Klein's paper.

 
The Eightfold Way – sculpture by Helaman Ferguson and accompanying book.

Most often, the quartic is modeled either by a smooth genus 3 surface with tetrahedral symmetry (replacing the edges of a regular tetrahedron with tubes/handles yields such a shape), which have been dubbed "tetruses",[8] or by polyhedral approximations, which have been dubbed "tetroids";[8] in both cases this is an embedding of the shape in 3 dimensions. The most notable smooth model (tetrus) is the sculpture The Eightfold Way by Helaman Ferguson at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, California, made of marble and serpentine, and unveiled on November 14, 1993. The title refers to the fact that starting at any vertex of the triangulated surface and moving along any edge, if you alternately turn left and right when reaching a vertex, you always return to the original point after eight edges. The acquisition of the sculpture led in due course to the publication of a book of papers (Levy 1999), detailing properties of the quartic and containing the first English translation of Klein's paper. Polyhedral models with tetrahedral symmetry most often have convex hull a truncated tetrahedron – see (Schulte & Wills 1985) and (Scholl, Schürmann & Wills 2002) for examples and illustrations. Some of these models consist of 20 triangles or 56 triangles (abstractly, the regular skew polyhedron {3,7|,4}, with 56 faces, 84 edges, and 24 vertices), which cannot be realized as equilateral, with twists in the arms of the tetrahedron; while others have 24 heptagons – these heptagons can be taken to be planar, though non-convex,[9] and the models are more complex than the triangular ones because the complexity is reflected in the shapes of the (non-flexible) heptagonal faces, rather than in the (flexible) vertices.[2]

 
The small cubicuboctahedron is a polyhedral immersion of the tiling of the Klein quartic with octahedral symmetry.

Alternatively, the quartic can be modeled by a polyhedron with octahedral symmetry: Klein modeled the quartic by a shape with octahedral symmetries and with points at infinity (an "open polyhedron"),[6] namely three hyperboloids meeting on orthogonal axes,[2] while it can also be modeled as a closed polyhedron which must be immersed (have self-intersections), not embedded.[2] Such polyhedra may have various convex hulls, including the truncated cube,[10] the snub cube,[9] or the rhombicuboctahedron, as in the small cubicuboctahedron at right.[3] The small cubicuboctahedron immersion is obtained by joining some of the triangles (2 triangles form a square, 6 form an octagon), which can be visualized by coloring the triangles (the corresponding tiling is topologically but not geometrically the 3 4 | 4 tiling). This immersion can also be used to geometrically construct the Mathieu group M24 by adding to PSL(2,7) the permutation which interchanges opposite points of the bisecting lines of the squares and octagons.[3]

Dessin d'enfants

The dessin d'enfant on the Klein quartic associated with the quotient map by its automorphism group (with quotient the Riemann sphere) is precisely the 1-skeleton of the order-3 heptagonal tiling.[11] That is, the quotient map is ramified over the points 0, 1728, and ; dividing by 1728 yields a Belyi function (ramified at 0, 1, and ), where the 56 vertices (black points in dessin) lie over 0, the midpoints of the 84 edges (white points in dessin) lie over 1, and the centers of the 24 heptagons lie over infinity. The resulting dessin is a "platonic" dessin, meaning edge-transitive and "clean" (each white point has valence 2).

Related Riemann surfaces

The Klein quartic is related to various other Riemann surfaces.

Geometrically, it is the smallest Hurwitz surface (lowest genus); the next is the Macbeath surface (genus 7), and the following is the First Hurwitz triplet (3 surfaces of genus 14). More generally, it is the most symmetric surface of a given genus (being a Hurwitz surface); in this class, the Bolza surface is the most symmetric genus 2 surface, while Bring's surface is a highly symmetric genus 4 surface – see isometries of Riemann surfaces for further discussion.

Algebraically, the (affine) Klein quartic is the modular curve X(7) and the projective Klein quartic is its compactification, just as the dodecahedron (with a cusp in the center of each face) is the modular curve X(5); this explains the relevance for number theory.

More subtly, the (projective) Klein quartic is a Shimura curve (as are the Hurwitz surfaces of genus 7 and 14), and as such parametrizes principally polarized abelian varieties of dimension 6.[12]

More exceptionally, the Klein quartic forms part of a "trinity" in the sense of Vladimir Arnold, which can also be described as a McKay correspondence. In this collection, the projective special linear groups PSL(2,5), PSL(2,7), and PSL(2,11) (orders 60, 168, 660) are analogous. Note that 4 × 5 × 6/2 = 60, 6 × 7 × 8/2 = 168, and 10 × 11 × 12/2 = 660. These correspond to icosahedral symmetry (genus 0), the symmetries of the Klein quartic (genus 3), and the buckyball surface (genus 70).[13] These are further connected to many other exceptional phenomena, which is elaborated at "trinities".

See also

References

  1. ^ (Levy 1999, p. 24)
  2. ^ a b c d e (Scholl, Schürmann & Wills 2002)
  3. ^ a b c (Richter)
  4. ^ Maxime Fortier Bourque, Bram Petri. "The Klein quartic maximizes the multiplicity of the first positive eigenvalue of the Laplacian"
  5. ^ Baez, John C. (23 May 2013). "Klein's Quartic Curve". John Baez's stuff.
  6. ^ a b Westendorp, Gerard. "Platonic tilings of Riemann surfaces".
  7. ^ Stay, Mike. "Klein's quartic".
  8. ^ a b c Séquin, Carlo H. (2006). "Patterns on the Genus-3 Klein Quartic" (PDF). In Sarhangi, Reza; Sharp, John (eds.). BRIDGES Mathematical Connections in Art, Music, and Science Conference Proceedings. Bridges 2006. London, UK: Tarquin. pp. 245–254. ISBN 0-9665201-7-3. ISSN 1099-6702.
  9. ^ a b (Schulte & Wills 1985)
  10. ^ Egan, Greg (5 June 2017). "Klein's Quartic Curve". Science Notes.
  11. ^ le Bruyn, Lieven (7 March 2007), , archived from the original on 27 February 2014.
  12. ^ Elkies, section 4.4 (pp. 94–97) in (Levy 1999).
  13. ^ Martin, David; Singerman, Pablo (April 17, 2008), From Biplanes to the Klein quartic and the Buckyball (PDF)

Literature

  • Klein, F. (1878). "Ueber die Transformation siebenter Ordnung der elliptischen Functionen" [On the order-seven transformation of elliptic functions]. Mathematische Annalen. 14 (3): 428–471. doi:10.1007/BF01677143. Translated in Levy 1999.
  • Elkies, N. (1998), "Shimura curve computations", Algorithmic number theory (Portland, OR, 1998), Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 1423, Berlin: Springer, pp. 1–47, arXiv:math.NT/0005160, doi:10.1007/BFb0054850, ISBN 978-3-540-64657-0, MR 1726059
  • Levy, Silvio, ed. (1999), The Eightfold Way, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute Publications, vol. 35, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-66066-2, MR 1722410. Paperback edition, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 978-0-521-00419-0. Reviewed by: Michler, Ruth I. (31 July 2000). "The Eightfold Way: The Beauty of Klein's Quartic Curve". Mathematical Association of America. MAA reviews.
  • Schulte, Egon; Wills, J. M. (1985-12-01), "A Polyhedral Realization of Felix Klein's Map {3, 7}8 on a Riemann Surface of Genus 3", J. London Math. Soc., s2-32 (3): 539–547, doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-32.3.539, retrieved 2010-04-17
  • Karcher, H.; Weber, M. (1996), On Klein's Riemann Surface, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.47.1879, retrieved 2010-04-17[dead link]
  • Richter, David A., How to Make the Mathieu Group M24, retrieved 2010-04-15
  • Schmutz, P. (1993). "Riemann surfaces with shortest geodesic of maximal length". GAFA. 3 (6): 564–631. doi:10.1007/BF01896258.
  • Scholl, P.; Schürmann, A.; Wills, J. M. (September 2002), , The Mathematical Intelligencer, 24 (3): 37–42, doi:10.1007/BF03024730, archived from the original on 2007-06-11{{citation}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • Singerman, David; Syddall, Robert I. (2003), "The Riemann Surface of a Uniform Dessin", Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie, 44 (2): 413–430

External links

  • Klein's Quartic Curve, John Baez, July 28, 2006
  • Klein's Quartic Curve, by Greg Egan – illustrations
  • Klein's Quartic Equations, by Greg Egan – illustrations

klein, quartic, klein, quadric, klein, quadric, hyperbolic, geometry, named, after, felix, klein, compact, riemann, surface, genus, with, highest, possible, order, automorphism, group, this, genus, namely, order, orientation, preserving, automorphisms, automor. For the Klein quadric see Klein quadric In hyperbolic geometry the Klein quartic named after Felix Klein is a compact Riemann surface of genus 3 with the highest possible order automorphism group for this genus namely order 168 orientation preserving automorphisms and 168 2 336 automorphisms if orientation may be reversed As such the Klein quartic is the Hurwitz surface of lowest possible genus see Hurwitz s automorphisms theorem Its orientation preserving automorphism group is isomorphic to PSL 2 7 the second smallest non abelian simple group after the alternating group A5 The quartic was first described in Klein 1878b The Klein quartic is a quotient of the order 7 triangular tiling Dually the Klein quartic is a quotient of the dual tiling the order 3 heptagonal tiling Klein s quartic occurs in many branches of mathematics in contexts including representation theory homology theory octonion multiplication citation needed Fermat s Last Theorem and the Stark Heegner theorem on imaginary quadratic number fields of class number one see Levy 1999 for a survey of properties Originally the Klein quartic referred specifically to the subset of the complex projective plane P2 C defined by an algebraic equation This has a specific Riemannian metric that makes it a minimal surface in P2 C under which its Gaussian curvature is not constant But more commonly as in this article it is now thought of as any Riemann surface that is conformally equivalent to this algebraic curve and especially the one that is a quotient of the hyperbolic plane H2 by a certain cocompact group G that acts freely on H2 by isometries This gives the Klein quartic a Riemannian metric of constant curvature 1 that it inherits from H2 This set of conformally equivalent Riemannian surfaces is precisely the same as all compact Riemannian surfaces of genus 3 whose conformal automorphism group is isomorphic to the unique simple group of order 168 This group is also known as PSL 2 7 and also as the isomorphic group PSL 3 2 By covering space theory the group G mentioned above is isomorphic to the fundamental group of the compact surface of genus 3 Contents 1 Closed and open forms 2 As an algebraic curve 3 Quaternion algebra construction 4 Tiling 4 1 Affine quartic 5 Fundamental domain and pants decomposition 6 Spectral theory 7 3 dimensional models 8 Dessin d enfants 9 Related Riemann surfaces 10 See also 11 References 12 Literature 13 External linksClosed and open forms EditIt is important to distinguish two different forms of the quartic The closed quartic is what is generally meant in geometry topologically it has genus 3 and is a compact space The open or punctured quartic is of interest in number theory topologically it is a genus 3 surface with 24 punctures and geometrically these punctures are cusps The open quartic may be obtained topologically from the closed quartic by puncturing at the 24 centers of the tiling by regular heptagons as discussed below The open and closed quartics have different metrics though they are both hyperbolic and complete 1 geometrically the cusps are points at infinity not holes hence the open quartic is still complete As an algebraic curve EditThe Klein quartic can be viewed as a projective algebraic curve over the complex numbers C defined by the following quartic equation in homogeneous coordinates x y z on P2 C x 3 y y 3 z z 3 x 0 displaystyle x 3 y y 3 z z 3 x 0 The locus of this equation in P2 C is the original Riemannian surface that Klein described Quaternion algebra construction EditThe compact Klein quartic can be constructed as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by the action of a suitable Fuchsian group G I which is the principal congruence subgroup associated with the ideal I h 2 displaystyle I langle eta 2 rangle in the ring of algebraic integers Z h of the field Q h where h 2 cos 2p 7 Note the identity 2 h 3 7 h 1 2 displaystyle 2 eta 3 7 eta 1 2 exhibiting 2 h as a prime factor of 7 in the ring of algebraic integers The group G I is a subgroup of the 2 3 7 hyperbolic triangle group Namely G I is a subgroup of the group of elements of unit norm in the quaternion algebra generated as an associative algebra by the generators i j and relations i 2 j 2 h i j j i displaystyle i 2 j 2 eta qquad ij ji One chooses a suitable Hurwitz quaternion order Q H u r displaystyle mathcal Q mathrm Hur in the quaternion algebra G I is then the group of norm 1 elements in 1 I Q H u r displaystyle 1 I mathcal Q mathrm Hur The least absolute value of a trace of a hyperbolic element in G I is h 2 3 h 2 displaystyle eta 2 3 eta 2 corresponding the value 3 936 for the systole of the Klein quartic one of the highest in this genus Tiling Edit The tiling of the quartic by reflection domains is a quotient of the 3 7 kisrhombille The Klein quartic admits tilings connected with the symmetry group a regular map 2 and these are used in understanding the symmetry group dating back to Klein s original paper Given a fundamental domain for the group action for the full orientation reversing symmetry group a 2 3 7 triangle the reflection domains images of this domain under the group give a tiling of the quartic such that the automorphism group of the tiling equals the automorphism group of the surface reflections in the lines of the tiling correspond to the reflections in the group reflections in the lines of a given fundamental triangle give a set of 3 generating reflections This tiling is a quotient of the order 3 bisected heptagonal tiling of the hyperbolic plane the universal cover of the quartic and all Hurwitz surfaces are tiled in the same way as quotients This tiling is uniform but not regular it is by scalene triangles and often regular tilings are used instead A quotient of any tiling in the 2 3 7 family can be used and will have the same automorphism group of these the two regular tilings are the tiling by 24 regular hyperbolic heptagons each of degree 3 meeting at 56 vertices and the dual tiling by 56 equilateral triangles each of degree 7 meeting at 24 vertices The order of the automorphism group is related being the number of polygons times the number of edges in the polygon in both cases 24 7 168 56 3 168The covering tilings on the hyperbolic plane are the order 3 heptagonal tiling and the order 7 triangular tiling The automorphism group can be augmented by a symmetry which is not realized by a symmetry of the tiling to yield the Mathieu group M24 3 Corresponding to each tiling of the quartic partition of the quartic variety into subsets is an abstract polyhedron which abstracts from the geometry and only reflects the combinatorics of the tiling this is a general way of obtaining an abstract polytope from a tiling the vertices edges and faces of the polyhedron are equal as sets to the vertices edges and faces of the tiling with the same incidence relations and the combinatorial automorphism group of the abstract polyhedron equals the geometric automorphism group of the quartic In this way the geometry reduces to combinatorics Affine quartic Edit The above is a tiling of the projective quartic a closed manifold the affine quartic has 24 cusps topologically punctures which correspond to the 24 vertices of the regular triangular tiling or equivalently the centers of the 24 heptagons in the heptagonal tiling and can be realized as follows Considering the action of SL 2 R on the upper half plane model H2 of the hyperbolic plane by Mobius transformations the affine Klein quartic can be realized as the quotient G 7 H2 Here G 7 is the congruence subgroup of SL 2 Z consisting of matrices that are congruent to the identity matrix when all entries are taken modulo 7 Fundamental domain and pants decomposition EditThe Klein quartic can be obtained as the quotient of the hyperbolic plane by the action of a Fuchsian group The fundamental domain is a regular 14 gon which has area 8 p displaystyle 8 pi by the Gauss Bonnet theorem This can be seen in the adjoining figure which also includes the 336 2 3 7 triangles that tessellate the surface and generate its group of symmetries The fundamental domain of the Klein quartic The surface is obtained by associating sides with equal numbers Within the tessellation by 2 3 7 triangles is a tessellation by 24 regular heptagons The systole of the surface passes through the midpoints of 8 heptagon sides for this reason it has been referred to as an eight step geodesic in the literature and is the reason for the title of the book in the section below All the coloured curves in the figure showing the pants decomposition are systoles however this is just a subset there are 21 in total The length of the systole is 16 sinh 1 1 2 csc 2 p 7 4 sin p 7 3 93594624883 displaystyle 16 sinh 1 left left tfrac 1 2 sqrt csc 2 left tfrac pi 7 right 4 right sin left tfrac pi 7 right right approx 3 93594624883 An equivalent closed formula is 8 cosh 1 3 2 2 sin 2 p 7 displaystyle 8 cosh 1 left tfrac 3 2 2 sin 2 left tfrac pi 7 right right Whilst the Klein quartic maximises the symmetry group for surfaces of genus 3 it does not maximise the systole length The conjectured maximiser is the surface referred to as M3 Schmutz 1993 M3 comes from a tessellation of 2 3 12 triangles and its systole has multiplicity 24 and length 2 cosh 1 2 3 3 9833047820988736 displaystyle 2 cosh 1 left 2 sqrt 3 right approx 3 9833047820988736 A pants decomposition of the Klein quartic The figure on the left shows the boundary geodesics in the 2 3 7 tessellation of the fundamental domain In the figure to the right the pants have each been coloured differently to make it clear which part of the fundamental domain belongs to which pair of pants The Klein quartic can be decomposed into four pairs of pants by cutting along six of its systoles This decomposition gives a symmetric set of Fenchel Nielsen coordinates where the length parameters are all equal to the length of the systole and the twist parameters are all equal to 1 8 displaystyle tfrac 1 8 of the length of the systole In particular taking l S displaystyle l S to be the systole length the coordinates are l S l S 8 l S l S 8 l S l S 8 l S l S 8 l S l S 8 l S l S 8 displaystyle left l S tfrac l S 8 l S tfrac l S 8 l S tfrac l S 8 l S tfrac l S 8 l S tfrac l S 8 l S tfrac l S 8 right The cubic graph corresponding to this pants decomposition is the tetrahedral graph that is the graph of 4 nodes each connected to the other 3 The tetrahedral graph is similar to the graph for the projective Fano plane indeed the automorphism group of the Klein quartic is isomorphic to that of the Fano plane Spectral theory Edit The eight functions corresponding to the first positive eigenvalue of the Klein quartic The functions are zero along the light blue lines These plots were produced in FreeFEM Little has been proved about the spectral theory of the Klein quartic Because the Klein quartic has the largest symmetry group of surfaces in its topological class much like the Bolza surface in genus 2 it has been conjectured that it maximises the first positive eigenvalue of the Laplace operator among all compact Riemann surfaces of genus 3 with constant negative curvature It also maximizes mutliplicity of the first positive eigenvalue 8 among all such surfaces a fact that has been recently proved 4 Eigenvalues of the Klein quartic have been calculated to varying degrees of accuracy The first 15 distinct positive eigenvalues are shown in the following table along with their multiplicities Numerical computations of the first 15 positive eigenvalues of the Klein quartic Eigenvalue Numerical value Multiplicityl 0 displaystyle lambda 0 0 1l 1 displaystyle lambda 1 2 67793 8l 2 displaystyle lambda 2 6 62251 7l 3 displaystyle lambda 3 10 8691 6l 4 displaystyle lambda 4 12 1844 8l 5 displaystyle lambda 5 17 2486 7l 6 displaystyle lambda 6 21 9705 7l 7 displaystyle lambda 7 24 0811 8l 8 displaystyle lambda 8 25 9276 6l 9 displaystyle lambda 9 30 8039 6l 10 displaystyle lambda 10 36 4555 8l 11 displaystyle lambda 11 37 4246 8l 12 displaystyle lambda 12 41 5131 6l 13 displaystyle lambda 13 44 8884 8l 14 displaystyle lambda 14 49 0429 6l 15 displaystyle lambda 15 50 6283 63 dimensional models Edit An animation by Greg Egan showing an embedding of Klein s Quartic Curve in three dimensions starting in a form that has the symmetries of a tetrahedron and turning inside out to demonstrate a further symmetry The Klein quartic cannot be realized as a 3 dimensional figure in the sense that no 3 dimensional figure has rotational symmetries equal to PSL 2 7 since PSL 2 7 does not embed as a subgroup of SO 3 or O 3 it does not have a non trivial 3 dimensional linear representation over the real numbers However many 3 dimensional models of the Klein quartic have been given starting in Klein s original paper 2 5 6 7 8 which seek to demonstrate features of the quartic and preserve the symmetries topologically though not all geometrically The resulting models most often have either tetrahedral order 12 or octahedral order 24 symmetries the remaining order 7 symmetry cannot be as easily visualized and in fact is the title of Klein s paper The Eightfold Way sculpture by Helaman Ferguson and accompanying book Most often the quartic is modeled either by a smooth genus 3 surface with tetrahedral symmetry replacing the edges of a regular tetrahedron with tubes handles yields such a shape which have been dubbed tetruses 8 or by polyhedral approximations which have been dubbed tetroids 8 in both cases this is an embedding of the shape in 3 dimensions The most notable smooth model tetrus is the sculpture The Eightfold Way by Helaman Ferguson at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley California made of marble and serpentine and unveiled on November 14 1993 The title refers to the fact that starting at any vertex of the triangulated surface and moving along any edge if you alternately turn left and right when reaching a vertex you always return to the original point after eight edges The acquisition of the sculpture led in due course to the publication of a book of papers Levy 1999 detailing properties of the quartic and containing the first English translation of Klein s paper Polyhedral models with tetrahedral symmetry most often have convex hull a truncated tetrahedron see Schulte amp Wills 1985 and Scholl Schurmann amp Wills 2002 for examples and illustrations Some of these models consist of 20 triangles or 56 triangles abstractly the regular skew polyhedron 3 7 4 with 56 faces 84 edges and 24 vertices which cannot be realized as equilateral with twists in the arms of the tetrahedron while others have 24 heptagons these heptagons can be taken to be planar though non convex 9 and the models are more complex than the triangular ones because the complexity is reflected in the shapes of the non flexible heptagonal faces rather than in the flexible vertices 2 The small cubicuboctahedron is a polyhedral immersion of the tiling of the Klein quartic with octahedral symmetry Alternatively the quartic can be modeled by a polyhedron with octahedral symmetry Klein modeled the quartic by a shape with octahedral symmetries and with points at infinity an open polyhedron 6 namely three hyperboloids meeting on orthogonal axes 2 while it can also be modeled as a closed polyhedron which must be immersed have self intersections not embedded 2 Such polyhedra may have various convex hulls including the truncated cube 10 the snub cube 9 or the rhombicuboctahedron as in the small cubicuboctahedron at right 3 The small cubicuboctahedron immersion is obtained by joining some of the triangles 2 triangles form a square 6 form an octagon which can be visualized by coloring the triangles the corresponding tiling is topologically but not geometrically the 3 4 4 tiling This immersion can also be used to geometrically construct the Mathieu group M24 by adding to PSL 2 7 the permutation which interchanges opposite points of the bisecting lines of the squares and octagons 3 Dessin d enfants EditThe dessin d enfant on the Klein quartic associated with the quotient map by its automorphism group with quotient the Riemann sphere is precisely the 1 skeleton of the order 3 heptagonal tiling 11 That is the quotient map is ramified over the points 0 1728 and dividing by 1728 yields a Belyi function ramified at 0 1 and where the 56 vertices black points in dessin lie over 0 the midpoints of the 84 edges white points in dessin lie over 1 and the centers of the 24 heptagons lie over infinity The resulting dessin is a platonic dessin meaning edge transitive and clean each white point has valence 2 Related Riemann surfaces EditThe Klein quartic is related to various other Riemann surfaces Geometrically it is the smallest Hurwitz surface lowest genus the next is the Macbeath surface genus 7 and the following is the First Hurwitz triplet 3 surfaces of genus 14 More generally it is the most symmetric surface of a given genus being a Hurwitz surface in this class the Bolza surface is the most symmetric genus 2 surface while Bring s surface is a highly symmetric genus 4 surface see isometries of Riemann surfaces for further discussion Algebraically the affine Klein quartic is the modular curve X 7 and the projective Klein quartic is its compactification just as the dodecahedron with a cusp in the center of each face is the modular curve X 5 this explains the relevance for number theory More subtly the projective Klein quartic is a Shimura curve as are the Hurwitz surfaces of genus 7 and 14 and as such parametrizes principally polarized abelian varieties of dimension 6 12 More exceptionally the Klein quartic forms part of a trinity in the sense of Vladimir Arnold which can also be described as a McKay correspondence In this collection the projective special linear groups PSL 2 5 PSL 2 7 and PSL 2 11 orders 60 168 660 are analogous Note that 4 5 6 2 60 6 7 8 2 168 and 10 11 12 2 660 These correspond to icosahedral symmetry genus 0 the symmetries of the Klein quartic genus 3 and the buckyball surface genus 70 13 These are further connected to many other exceptional phenomena which is elaborated at trinities See also EditGrunbaum Rigby configuration Shimura curve Hurwitz surface Bolza surface Bring s curve Macbeath surface First Hurwitz tripletReferences Edit Levy 1999 p 24 a b c d e Scholl Schurmann amp Wills 2002 a b c Richter Maxime Fortier Bourque Bram Petri The Klein quartic maximizes the multiplicity of the first positive eigenvalue of the Laplacian Baez John C 23 May 2013 Klein s Quartic Curve John Baez s stuff a b Westendorp Gerard Platonic tilings of Riemann surfaces Stay Mike Klein s quartic a b c Sequin Carlo H 2006 Patterns on the Genus 3 Klein Quartic PDF In Sarhangi Reza Sharp John eds BRIDGES Mathematical Connections in Art Music and Science Conference Proceedings Bridges 2006 London UK Tarquin pp 245 254 ISBN 0 9665201 7 3 ISSN 1099 6702 a b Schulte amp Wills 1985 Egan Greg 5 June 2017 Klein s Quartic Curve Science Notes le Bruyn Lieven 7 March 2007 The best rejected proposal ever archived from the original on 27 February 2014 Elkies section 4 4 pp 94 97 in Levy 1999 Martin David Singerman Pablo April 17 2008 From Biplanes to the Klein quartic and the Buckyball PDF Literature EditKlein F 1878 Ueber die Transformation siebenter Ordnung der elliptischen Functionen On the order seven transformation of elliptic functions Mathematische Annalen 14 3 428 471 doi 10 1007 BF01677143 Translated in Levy 1999 Elkies N 1998 Shimura curve computations Algorithmic number theory Portland OR 1998 Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol 1423 Berlin Springer pp 1 47 arXiv math NT 0005160 doi 10 1007 BFb0054850 ISBN 978 3 540 64657 0 MR 1726059 Levy Silvio ed 1999 The Eightfold Way Mathematical Sciences Research Institute Publications vol 35 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66066 2 MR 1722410 Paperback edition Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 521 00419 0 Reviewed by Michler Ruth I 31 July 2000 The Eightfold Way The Beauty of Klein s Quartic Curve Mathematical Association of America MAA reviews Schulte Egon Wills J M 1985 12 01 A Polyhedral Realization of Felix Klein s Map 3 7 8 on a Riemann Surface of Genus 3 J London Math Soc s2 32 3 539 547 doi 10 1112 jlms s2 32 3 539 retrieved 2010 04 17 Karcher H Weber M 1996 On Klein s Riemann Surface CiteSeerX 10 1 1 47 1879 retrieved 2010 04 17 dead link Richter David A How to Make the Mathieu Group M24 retrieved 2010 04 15 Schmutz P 1993 Riemann surfaces with shortest geodesic of maximal length GAFA 3 6 564 631 doi 10 1007 BF01896258 Scholl P Schurmann A Wills J M September 2002 Polyhedral Models of Felix Klein s Group The Mathematical Intelligencer 24 3 37 42 doi 10 1007 BF03024730 archived from the original on 2007 06 11 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Singerman David Syddall Robert I 2003 The Riemann Surface of a Uniform Dessin Beitrage zur Algebra und Geometrie 44 2 413 430External links EditKlein s Quartic Curve John Baez July 28 2006 Klein s Quartic Curve by Greg Egan illustrations Klein s Quartic Equations by Greg Egan illustrations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Klein quartic amp oldid 1119047521, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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