fbpx
Wikipedia

Pappus's hexagon theorem

In mathematics, Pappus's hexagon theorem (attributed to Pappus of Alexandria) states that

  • given one set of collinear points and another set of collinear points then the intersection points of line pairs and and and are collinear, lying on the Pappus line. These three points are the points of intersection of the "opposite" sides of the hexagon .
Pappus's hexagon theorem: Points X, Y and Z are collinear on the Pappus line. The hexagon is AbCaBc.
Pappus's theorem: affine form

It holds in a projective plane over any field, but fails for projective planes over any noncommutative division ring.[1] Projective planes in which the "theorem" is valid are called pappian planes.

If one restricts the projective plane such that the Pappus line is the line at infinity, one gets the affine version of Pappus's theorem shown in the second diagram.

If the Pappus line and the lines have a point in common, one gets the so-called little version of Pappus's theorem.[2]

The dual of this incidence theorem states that given one set of concurrent lines , and another set of concurrent lines , then the lines defined by pairs of points resulting from pairs of intersections and and and are concurrent. (Concurrent means that the lines pass through one point.)

Pappus's theorem is a special case of Pascal's theorem for a conic—the limiting case when the conic degenerates into 2 straight lines. Pascal's theorem is in turn a special case of the Cayley–Bacharach theorem.

The Pappus configuration is the configuration of 9 lines and 9 points that occurs in Pappus's theorem, with each line meeting 3 of the points and each point meeting 3 lines. In general, the Pappus line does not pass through the point of intersection of and .[3] This configuration is self dual. Since, in particular, the lines have the properties of the lines of the dual theorem, and collinearity of is equivalent to concurrence of , the dual theorem is therefore just the same as the theorem itself. The Levi graph of the Pappus configuration is the Pappus graph, a bipartite distance-regular graph with 18 vertices and 27 edges.

Proof: affine form

 
Pappus theorem: proof

If the affine form of the statement can be proven, then the projective form of Pappus's theorem is proven, as the extension of a pappian plane to a projective plane is unique.

Because of the parallelity in an affine plane one has to distinct two cases:   and  . The key for a simple proof is the possibility for introducing a "suitable" coordinate system:

Case 1: The lines   intersect at point  .
In this case coordinates are introduced, such that   (see diagram).   have the coordinates  .

From the parallelity of the lines   one gets   and the parallelity of the lines   yields  . Hence line   has slope   and is parallel line  .

Case 2:   (little theorem).
In this case the coordinates are chosen such that  . From the parallelity of   and   one gets   and  , respectively, and at least the parallelity  .

Proof with homogeneous coordinates

Choose homogeneous coordinates with

 .

On the lines  , given by  , take the points   to be

 

for some  . The three lines   are  , so they pass through the same point   if and only if  . The condition for the three lines   and   with equations   to pass through the same point   is  . So this last set of three lines is concurrent if all the other eight sets are because multiplication is commutative, so  . Equivalently,   are collinear.

The proof above also shows that for Pappus's theorem to hold for a projective space over a division ring it is both sufficient and necessary that the division ring is a (commutative) field. German mathematician Gerhard Hessenberg proved that Pappus's theorem implies Desargues's theorem.[4][5] In general, Pappus's theorem holds for some projective plane if and only if it is a projective plane over a commutative field. The projective planes in which Pappus's theorem does not hold are Desarguesian projective planes over noncommutative division rings, and non-Desarguesian planes.

The proof is invalid if   happen to be collinear. In that case an alternative proof can be provided, for example, using a different projective reference.

Dual theorem

Because of the principle of duality for projective planes the dual theorem of Pappus is true:

If 6 lines   are chosen alternately from two pencils with centers  , the lines

 
 
 

are concurrent, that means: they have a point   in common.
The left diagram shows the projective version, the right one an affine version, where the points   are points at infinity. If point   is on the line   than one gets the "dual little theorem" of Pappus' theorem.

If in the affine version of the dual "little theorem" point   is a point at infinity too, one gets Thomsen's theorem, a statement on 6 points on the sides of a triangle (see diagram). The Thomsen figure plays an essential role coordinatising an axiomatic defined projective plane.[6] The proof of the closure of Thomsen's figure is covered by the proof for the "little theorem", given above. But there exists a simple direct proof, too:

Because the statement of Thomsen's theorem (the closure of the figure) uses only the terms connect, intersect and parallel, the statement is affinely invariant, and one can introduce coordinates such that   (see right diagram). The starting point of the sequence of chords is   One easily verifies the coordinates of the points given in the diagram, which shows: the last point coincides with the first point.

Other statements of the theorem

 
Triangles   and   are perspective from   and  , and so, also from  .

In addition to the above characterizations of Pappus's theorem and its dual, the following are equivalent statements:

  • If the six vertices of a hexagon lie alternately on two lines, then the three points of intersection of pairs of opposite sides are collinear.[7]
  • Arranged in a matrix of nine points (as in the figure and description above) and thought of as evaluating a permanent, if the first two rows and the six "diagonal" triads are collinear, then the third row is collinear.
 
That is, if   are lines, then Pappus's theorem states that   must be a line. Also, note that the same matrix formulation applies to the dual form of the theorem when   etc. are triples of concurrent lines.[8]
  • Given three distinct points on each of two distinct lines, pair each point on one of the lines with one from the other line, then the joins of points not paired will meet in (opposite) pairs at points along a line.[9]
  • If two triangles are perspective in at least two different ways, then they are perspective in three ways.[4]
  • If   and   are concurrent and   and   are concurrent, then   and   are concurrent.[8]

Origins

In its earliest known form, Pappus's Theorem is Propositions 138, 139, 141, and 143 of Book VII of Pappus's Collection.[10] These are Lemmas XII, XIII, XV, and XVII in the part of Book VII consisting of lemmas to the first of the three books of Euclid's Porisms.

The lemmas are proved in terms of what today is known as the cross ratio of four collinear points. Three earlier lemmas are used. The first of these, Lemma III, has the diagram below (which uses Pappus's lettering, with G for Γ, D for Δ, J for Θ, and L for Λ).

 

Here three concurrent straight lines, AB, AG, and AD, are crossed by two lines, JB and JE, which concur at J. Also KL is drawn parallel to AZ. Then

KJ : JL :: (KJ : AG & AG : JL) :: (JD : GD & BG : JB).

These proportions might be written today as equations:[11]

KJ/JL = (KJ/AG)(AG/JL) = (JD/GD)(BG/JB).

The last compound ratio (namely JD : GD & BG : JB) is what is known today as the cross ratio of the collinear points J, G, D, and B in that order; it is denoted today by (J, G; D, B). So we have shown that this is independent of the choice of the particular straight line JD that crosses the three straight lines that concur at A. In particular

(J, G; D, B) = (J, Z; H, E).

It does not matter on which side of A the straight line JE falls. In particular, the situation may be as in the next diagram, which is the diagram for Lemma X.

 

Just as before, we have (J, G; D, B) = (J, Z; H, E). Pappus does not explicitly prove this; but Lemma X is a converse, namely that if these two cross ratios are the same, and the straight lines BE and DH cross at A, then the points G, A, and Z must be collinear.

What we showed originally can be written as (J, ∞; K, L) = (J, G; D, B), with ∞ taking the place of the (nonexistent) intersection of JK and AG. Pappus shows this, in effect, in Lemma XI, whose diagram, however, has different lettering:

 

What Pappus shows is DE.ZH : EZ.HD :: GB : BE, which we may write as

(D, Z; E, H) = (∞, B; E, G).

The diagram for Lemma XII is:

 

The diagram for Lemma XIII is the same, but BA and DG, extended, meet at N. In any case, considering straight lines through G as cut by the three straight lines through A, (and accepting that equations of cross ratios remain valid after permutation of the entries,) we have by Lemma III or XI

(G, J; E, H) = (G, D; ∞ Z).

Considering straight lines through D as cut by the three straight lines through B, we have

(L, D; E, K) = (G, D; ∞ Z).

Thus (E, H; J, G) = (E, K; D, L), so by Lemma X, the points H, M, and K are collinear. That is, the points of intersection of the pairs of opposite sides of the hexagon ADEGBZ are collinear.

Lemmas XV and XVII are that, if the point M is determined as the intersection of HK and BG, then the points A, M, and D are collinear. That is, the points of intersection of the pairs of opposite sides of the hexagon BEKHZG are collinear.

Notes

  1. ^ Coxeter, pp. 236–7
  2. ^ Rolf Lingenberg: Grundlagen der Geometrie, BI-Taschenbuch, 1969, p. 93
  3. ^ However, this does occur when   and   are in perspective, that is,   and   are concurrent.
  4. ^ a b Coxeter 1969, p. 238
  5. ^ According to (Dembowski 1968, pg. 159, footnote 1), Hessenberg's original proof Hessenberg (1905) is not complete; he disregarded the possibility that some additional incidences could occur in the Desargues configuration. A complete proof is provided by Cronheim 1953.
  6. ^ W. Blaschke: Projektive Geometrie, Springer-Verlag, 2013, ISBN 3034869320, S. 190
  7. ^ Coxeter, p. 231
  8. ^ a b Coxeter, p. 233
  9. ^ Whicher, chapter 14
  10. ^ Heath (Vol. II, p. 421) cites these propositions. The latter two can be understood as converses of the former two. Kline (p. 128) cites only Proposition 139. The numbering of the propositions is as assigned by Hultsch.
  11. ^ A reason for using the notation above is that, for the ancient Greeks, a ratio is not a number or a geometrical object. We may think of ratio today as an equivalence class of pairs of geometrical objects. Also, equality for the Greeks is what we might today call congruence. In particular, distinct line segments may be equal. Ratios are not equal in this sense; but they may be the same.

References

  • Coxeter, Harold Scott MacDonald (1969), Introduction to Geometry (2nd ed.), New York: John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-471-50458-0, MR 0123930
  • Cronheim, A. (1953), "A proof of Hessenberg's theorem", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 4 (2): 219–221, doi:10.2307/2031794, JSTOR 2031794
  • Dembowski, Peter (1968), Finite Geometries, Berlin: Springer Verlag
  • Heath, Thomas (1981) [1921], A History of Greek Mathematics, New York: Dover
  • Hessenberg, Gerhard (1905), "Beweis des Desarguesschen Satzes aus dem Pascalschen", Mathematische Annalen, Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer, 61 (2): 161–172, doi:10.1007/BF01457558, ISSN 1432-1807, S2CID 120456855
  • Hultsch, Fridericus (1877), Pappi Alexandrini Collectionis Quae Supersunt, Berlin
  • Kline, Morris (1972), Mathematical Thought From Ancient to Modern Times, New York: Oxford University Press
  • Pambuccian, Victor; Schacht, Celia (2019), "The axiomatic destiny of the theorems of Pappus and Desargues", in Dani, S. G.; Papadopoulos, A. (eds.), Geometry in history, Springer, pp. 355–399, ISBN 978-3-030-13611-6
  • Whicher, Olive (1971), Projective Geometry, Rudolph Steiner Press, ISBN 0-85440-245-4

External links

  • Pappus's hexagon theorem at cut-the-knot
  • Dual to Pappus's hexagon theorem at cut-the-knot
  • Pappus’s Theorem: Nine proofs and three variations

pappus, hexagon, theorem, mathematics, attributed, pappus, alexandria, states, thatgiven, collinear, points, displaystyle, another, collinear, points, displaystyle, then, intersection, points, displaystyle, line, pairs, displaystyle, displaystyle, displaystyle. In mathematics Pappus s hexagon theorem attributed to Pappus of Alexandria states thatgiven one set of collinear points A B C displaystyle A B C and another set of collinear points a b c displaystyle a b c then the intersection points X Y Z displaystyle X Y Z of line pairs A b displaystyle Ab and a B A c displaystyle aB Ac and a C B c displaystyle aC Bc and b C displaystyle bC are collinear lying on the Pappus line These three points are the points of intersection of the opposite sides of the hexagon A b C a B c displaystyle AbCaBc Pappus s hexagon theorem Points X Y and Z are collinear on the Pappus line The hexagon is AbCaBc Pappus s theorem affine form A b a B B c b C A c a C displaystyle Ab parallel aB Bc parallel bC Rightarrow Ac parallel aC It holds in a projective plane over any field but fails for projective planes over any noncommutative division ring 1 Projective planes in which the theorem is valid are called pappian planes If one restricts the projective plane such that the Pappus line u displaystyle u is the line at infinity one gets the affine version of Pappus s theorem shown in the second diagram If the Pappus line u displaystyle u and the lines g h displaystyle g h have a point in common one gets the so called little version of Pappus s theorem 2 The dual of this incidence theorem states that given one set of concurrent lines A B C displaystyle A B C and another set of concurrent lines a b c displaystyle a b c then the lines x y z displaystyle x y z defined by pairs of points resulting from pairs of intersections A b displaystyle A cap b and a B A c displaystyle a cap B A cap c and a C B c displaystyle a cap C B cap c and b C displaystyle b cap C are concurrent Concurrent means that the lines pass through one point Pappus s theorem is a special case of Pascal s theorem for a conic the limiting case when the conic degenerates into 2 straight lines Pascal s theorem is in turn a special case of the Cayley Bacharach theorem The Pappus configuration is the configuration of 9 lines and 9 points that occurs in Pappus s theorem with each line meeting 3 of the points and each point meeting 3 lines In general the Pappus line does not pass through the point of intersection of A B C displaystyle ABC and a b c displaystyle abc 3 This configuration is self dual Since in particular the lines B c b C X Y displaystyle Bc bC XY have the properties of the lines x y z displaystyle x y z of the dual theorem and collinearity of X Y Z displaystyle X Y Z is equivalent to concurrence of B c b C X Y displaystyle Bc bC XY the dual theorem is therefore just the same as the theorem itself The Levi graph of the Pappus configuration is the Pappus graph a bipartite distance regular graph with 18 vertices and 27 edges Contents 1 Proof affine form 2 Proof with homogeneous coordinates 3 Dual theorem 4 Other statements of the theorem 5 Origins 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksProof affine form Edit Pappus theorem proof If the affine form of the statement can be proven then the projective form of Pappus s theorem is proven as the extension of a pappian plane to a projective plane is unique Because of the parallelity in an affine plane one has to distinct two cases g h displaystyle g not parallel h and g h displaystyle g parallel h The key for a simple proof is the possibility for introducing a suitable coordinate system Case 1 The lines g h displaystyle g h intersect at point S g h displaystyle S g cap h In this case coordinates are introduced such that S 0 0 A 0 1 c 1 0 displaystyle S 0 0 A 0 1 c 1 0 see diagram B C displaystyle B C have the coordinates B 0 g C 0 d g d 0 1 displaystyle B 0 gamma C 0 delta gamma delta notin 0 1 From the parallelity of the lines B c C b displaystyle Bc Cb one gets b d g 0 displaystyle b tfrac delta gamma 0 and the parallelity of the lines A b B a displaystyle Ab Ba yields a d 0 displaystyle a delta 0 Hence line C a displaystyle Ca has slope 1 displaystyle 1 and is parallel line A c displaystyle Ac Case 2 g h displaystyle g parallel h little theorem In this case the coordinates are chosen such that c 0 0 b 1 0 A 0 1 B g 1 g 0 displaystyle c 0 0 b 1 0 A 0 1 B gamma 1 gamma neq 0 From the parallelity of A b B a displaystyle Ab parallel Ba and c B b C displaystyle cB parallel bC one gets C g 1 1 displaystyle C gamma 1 1 and a g 1 0 displaystyle a gamma 1 0 respectively and at least the parallelity A c C a displaystyle Ac parallel Ca Proof with homogeneous coordinates EditChoose homogeneous coordinates with C 1 0 0 c 0 1 0 X 0 0 1 A 1 1 1 displaystyle C 1 0 0 c 0 1 0 X 0 0 1 A 1 1 1 On the lines A C A c A X displaystyle AC Ac AX given by x 2 x 3 x 1 x 3 x 2 x 1 displaystyle x 2 x 3 x 1 x 3 x 2 x 1 take the points B Y b displaystyle B Y b to be B p 1 1 Y 1 q 1 b 1 1 r displaystyle B p 1 1 Y 1 q 1 b 1 1 r for some p q r displaystyle p q r The three lines X B C Y c b displaystyle XB CY cb are x 1 x 2 p x 2 x 3 q x 3 x 1 r displaystyle x 1 x 2 p x 2 x 3 q x 3 x 1 r so they pass through the same point a displaystyle a if and only if r q p 1 displaystyle rqp 1 The condition for the three lines C b c B displaystyle Cb cB and X Y displaystyle XY with equations x 2 x 1 q x 1 x 3 p x 3 x 2 r displaystyle x 2 x 1 q x 1 x 3 p x 3 x 2 r to pass through the same point Z displaystyle Z is r p q 1 displaystyle rpq 1 So this last set of three lines is concurrent if all the other eight sets are because multiplication is commutative so p q q p displaystyle pq qp Equivalently X Y Z displaystyle X Y Z are collinear The proof above also shows that for Pappus s theorem to hold for a projective space over a division ring it is both sufficient and necessary that the division ring is a commutative field German mathematician Gerhard Hessenberg proved that Pappus s theorem implies Desargues s theorem 4 5 In general Pappus s theorem holds for some projective plane if and only if it is a projective plane over a commutative field The projective planes in which Pappus s theorem does not hold are Desarguesian projective planes over noncommutative division rings and non Desarguesian planes The proof is invalid if C c X displaystyle C c X happen to be collinear In that case an alternative proof can be provided for example using a different projective reference Dual theorem EditBecause of the principle of duality for projective planes the dual theorem of Pappus is true If 6 lines A b C a B c displaystyle A b C a B c are chosen alternately from two pencils with centers G H displaystyle G H the lines X A b a B displaystyle X A cap b a cap B Y c A C a displaystyle Y c cap A C cap a Z b C B c displaystyle Z b cap C B cap c are concurrent that means they have a point U displaystyle U in common The left diagram shows the projective version the right one an affine version where the points G H displaystyle G H are points at infinity If point U displaystyle U is on the line G H displaystyle GH than one gets the dual little theorem of Pappus theorem dual theorem projective form dual theorem affine formIf in the affine version of the dual little theorem point U displaystyle U is a point at infinity too one gets Thomsen s theorem a statement on 6 points on the sides of a triangle see diagram The Thomsen figure plays an essential role coordinatising an axiomatic defined projective plane 6 The proof of the closure of Thomsen s figure is covered by the proof for the little theorem given above But there exists a simple direct proof too Because the statement of Thomsen s theorem the closure of the figure uses only the terms connect intersect and parallel the statement is affinely invariant and one can introduce coordinates such that P 0 0 Q 1 0 R 0 1 displaystyle P 0 0 Q 1 0 R 0 1 see right diagram The starting point of the sequence of chords is 0 l displaystyle 0 lambda One easily verifies the coordinates of the points given in the diagram which shows the last point coincides with the first point Thomsen figure points 1 2 3 4 5 6 displaystyle color red 1 2 3 4 5 6 of the triangle P Q R displaystyle PQR as dual theorem of the little theorem of Pappus U displaystyle U is at infinity too Thomsen figure proofOther statements of the theorem Edit Triangles X c C displaystyle XcC and B b Y displaystyle BbY are perspective from A displaystyle A and a displaystyle a and so also from Z displaystyle Z In addition to the above characterizations of Pappus s theorem and its dual the following are equivalent statements If the six vertices of a hexagon lie alternately on two lines then the three points of intersection of pairs of opposite sides are collinear 7 Arranged in a matrix of nine points as in the figure and description above and thought of as evaluating a permanent if the first two rows and the six diagonal triads are collinear then the third row is collinear A B C a b c X Y Z displaystyle left begin matrix A amp B amp C a amp b amp c X amp Y amp Z end matrix right dd That is if A B C a b c A b Z B c X C a Y X b C Y c A Z a B displaystyle ABC abc AbZ BcX CaY XbC YcA ZaB are lines then Pappus s theorem states that X Y Z displaystyle XYZ must be a line Also note that the same matrix formulation applies to the dual form of the theorem when A B C displaystyle A B C etc are triples of concurrent lines 8 Given three distinct points on each of two distinct lines pair each point on one of the lines with one from the other line then the joins of points not paired will meet in opposite pairs at points along a line 9 If two triangles are perspective in at least two different ways then they are perspective in three ways 4 If A B C D displaystyle AB CD and E F displaystyle EF are concurrent and D E F A displaystyle DE FA and B C displaystyle BC are concurrent then A D B E displaystyle AD BE and C F displaystyle CF are concurrent 8 Origins EditIn its earliest known form Pappus s Theorem is Propositions 138 139 141 and 143 of Book VII of Pappus s Collection 10 These are Lemmas XII XIII XV and XVII in the part of Book VII consisting of lemmas to the first of the three books of Euclid s Porisms The lemmas are proved in terms of what today is known as the cross ratio of four collinear points Three earlier lemmas are used The first of these Lemma III has the diagram below which uses Pappus s lettering with G for G D for D J for 8 and L for L Here three concurrent straight lines AB AG and AD are crossed by two lines JB and JE which concur at J Also KL is drawn parallel to AZ Then KJ JL KJ AG amp AG JL JD GD amp BG JB These proportions might be written today as equations 11 KJ JL KJ AG AG JL JD GD BG JB The last compound ratio namely JD GD amp BG JB is what is known today as the cross ratio of the collinear points J G D and B in that order it is denoted today by J G D B So we have shown that this is independent of the choice of the particular straight line JD that crosses the three straight lines that concur at A In particular J G D B J Z H E It does not matter on which side of A the straight line JE falls In particular the situation may be as in the next diagram which is the diagram for Lemma X Just as before we have J G D B J Z H E Pappus does not explicitly prove this but Lemma X is a converse namely that if these two cross ratios are the same and the straight lines BE and DH cross at A then the points G A and Z must be collinear What we showed originally can be written as J K L J G D B with taking the place of the nonexistent intersection of JK and AG Pappus shows this in effect in Lemma XI whose diagram however has different lettering What Pappus shows is DE ZH EZ HD GB BE which we may write as D Z E H B E G The diagram for Lemma XII is The diagram for Lemma XIII is the same but BA and DG extended meet at N In any case considering straight lines through G as cut by the three straight lines through A and accepting that equations of cross ratios remain valid after permutation of the entries we have by Lemma III or XI G J E H G D Z Considering straight lines through D as cut by the three straight lines through B we have L D E K G D Z Thus E H J G E K D L so by Lemma X the points H M and K are collinear That is the points of intersection of the pairs of opposite sides of the hexagon ADEGBZ are collinear Lemmas XV and XVII are that if the point M is determined as the intersection of HK and BG then the points A M and D are collinear That is the points of intersection of the pairs of opposite sides of the hexagon BEKHZG are collinear Notes Edit Coxeter pp 236 7 Rolf Lingenberg Grundlagen der Geometrie BI Taschenbuch 1969 p 93 However this does occur when A B C displaystyle ABC and a b c displaystyle abc are in perspective that is A a B b displaystyle Aa Bb and C c displaystyle Cc are concurrent a b Coxeter 1969 p 238 According to Dembowski 1968 pg 159 footnote 1 Hessenberg s original proof Hessenberg 1905 is not complete he disregarded the possibility that some additional incidences could occur in the Desargues configuration A complete proof is provided by Cronheim 1953 W Blaschke Projektive Geometrie Springer Verlag 2013 ISBN 3034869320 S 190 Coxeter p 231 a b Coxeter p 233 Whicher chapter 14 Heath Vol II p 421 cites these propositions The latter two can be understood as converses of the former two Kline p 128 cites only Proposition 139 The numbering of the propositions is as assigned by Hultsch A reason for using the notation above is that for the ancient Greeks a ratio is not a number or a geometrical object We may think of ratio today as an equivalence class of pairs of geometrical objects Also equality for the Greeks is what we might today call congruence In particular distinct line segments may be equal Ratios are not equal in this sense but they may be the same References EditCoxeter Harold Scott MacDonald 1969 Introduction to Geometry 2nd ed New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 50458 0 MR 0123930 Cronheim A 1953 A proof of Hessenberg s theorem Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 4 2 219 221 doi 10 2307 2031794 JSTOR 2031794 Dembowski Peter 1968 Finite Geometries Berlin Springer Verlag Heath Thomas 1981 1921 A History of Greek Mathematics New York Dover Hessenberg Gerhard 1905 Beweis des Desarguesschen Satzes aus dem Pascalschen Mathematische Annalen Berlin Heidelberg Springer 61 2 161 172 doi 10 1007 BF01457558 ISSN 1432 1807 S2CID 120456855 Hultsch Fridericus 1877 Pappi Alexandrini Collectionis Quae Supersunt Berlin Kline Morris 1972 Mathematical Thought From Ancient to Modern Times New York Oxford University Press Pambuccian Victor Schacht Celia 2019 The axiomatic destiny of the theorems of Pappus and Desargues in Dani S G Papadopoulos A eds Geometry in history Springer pp 355 399 ISBN 978 3 030 13611 6 Whicher Olive 1971 Projective Geometry Rudolph Steiner Press ISBN 0 85440 245 4External links EditPappus s hexagon theorem at cut the knot Dual to Pappus s hexagon theorem at cut the knot Pappus s Theorem Nine proofs and three variations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pappus 27s hexagon theorem amp oldid 1118193518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.