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Poincaré half-plane model

In non-Euclidean geometry, the Poincaré half-plane model is the upper half-plane, denoted below as H , together with a metric, the Poincaré metric, that makes it a model of two-dimensional hyperbolic geometry.

Parallel rays in Poincare half-plane model of hyperbolic geometry

Equivalently the Poincaré half-plane model is sometimes described as a complex plane where the imaginary part (the y coordinate mentioned above) is positive.

The Poincaré half-plane model is named after Henri Poincaré, but it originated with Eugenio Beltrami who used it, along with the Klein model and the Poincaré disk model, to show that hyperbolic geometry was equiconsistent with Euclidean geometry.

This model is conformal which means that the angles measured at a point are the same in the model as they are in the actual hyperbolic plane.

The Cayley transform provides an isometry between the half-plane model and the Poincaré disk model.

This model can be generalized to model an dimensional hyperbolic space by replacing the real number x by a vector in an n dimensional Euclidean vector space.

Metric edit

The metric of the model on the half-plane,   is:

 

where s measures the length along a (possibly curved) line. The straight lines in the hyperbolic plane (geodesics for this metric tensor, i.e., curves which minimize the distance) are represented in this model by circular arcs perpendicular to the x-axis (half-circles whose centers are on the x-axis) and straight vertical rays perpendicular to the x-axis.

Distance calculation edit

 
The distance between two points in the half-plane model can be computed in terms of Euclidean distances in an isosceles trapezoid formed by the points and their reflection across the x-axis: a "side length" s, a "diagonal" d, and two "heights" h1 and h2. It is the logarithm dist(p1, p2) = log((s + d)2/h1h2)
 
Distance between two points can alternately be computed using ratios of Euclidean distances to the ideal points at the ends of the hyperbolic line.
 
Distance from the apex of a semicircle to another point on it is the inverse Gudermannian function of the central angle.

If   and   are two points in the half-plane   and   is the reflection of   across the x-axis into the lower half plane, the distance between the two points under the hyperbolic-plane metric is:

 

where   is the Euclidean distance between points   and     is the inverse hyperbolic sine, and   is the inverse hyperbolic tangent. This   formula can be thought of as coming from the chord length in the Minkowski metric between points in the hyperboloid model,   analogous to finding arclength on a sphere in terms of chord length. This   formula can be thought of as coming from Euclidean distance in the Poincaré disk model with one point at the origin, analogous to finding arclength on the sphere by taking a stereographic projection centered on one point and measuring the Euclidean distance in the plane from the origin to the other point.

If the two points   and   are on a hyperbolic line (Euclidean half-circle) which intersects the x-axis at the ideal points   and   the distance from   to   is:

 

Cf. Cross-ratio.

Some special cases can be simplified. Two points with the same   coordinate:[1]

 

Two points with the same   coordinate:

 

One point   at the apex of the semicircle   and another point at a central angle of  

 

where   is the inverse Gudermannian function, and   is the inverse hyperbolic tangent.

Special points and curves edit

  • Ideal points (points at infinity) in the Poincaré half-plane model are of two kinds:
  • the points on the x-axis, and
  • one imaginary point at   which is the ideal point to which all lines orthogonal to the x-axis converge.
  • Straight lines, geodesics (the shortest path between the points contained within it) are modeled by either:
  • half-circles whose origin is on the x-axis
  • straight vertical rays orthogonal to the x-axis
  • A circle (curves equidistant from a central point) with center   and radius   is modeled by:
a circle with center   and radius  
  • A hypercycle (a curve equidistant from a straight line, its axis) is modeled by either:
  • a circular arc which intersects the x-axis at the same two ideal points as the half-circle which models its axis but at an acute or obtuse angle
  • a straight line which intersects the x-axis at the same point as the vertical line which models its axis, but at an acute or obtuse angle.
  • A horocycle (a curve whose normals all converge asymptotically in the same direction, its center) is modeled by either:
  • a circle tangent to the x-axis (but excluding the ideal point of intersection, which is its center)
  • a line parallel to the x-axis, in this case the center is the ideal point at  .

Euclidean synopsis edit

A Euclidean circle with center   and radius   represents:

  • when the circle is completely inside the halfplane a hyperbolic circle with center
 
and radius
 
  • when the circle is completely inside the halfplane and touches the boundary a horocycle centered around the ideal point  
  • when the circle intersects the boundary orthogonal   a hyperbolic line
  • when the circle intersects the boundary non- orthogonal a hypercycle.

Compass and straightedge constructions edit

Here is how one can use compass and straightedge constructions in the model to achieve the effect of the basic constructions in the hyperbolic plane.[2] For example, how to construct the half-circle in the Euclidean half-plane which models a line on the hyperbolic plane through two given points.

Creating the line through two existing points edit

Draw the line segment between the two points. Construct the perpendicular bisector of the line segment. Find its intersection with the x-axis. Draw the circle around the intersection which passes through the given points. Erase the part which is on or below the x-axis.

Or in the special case where the two given points lie on a vertical line, draw that vertical line through the two points and erase the part which is on or below the x-axis.

Creating the circle through one point with center another point edit

  • If the two points are not on a vertical line:

Draw the radial line (half-circle) between the two given points as in the previous case. Construct a tangent to that line at the non-central point. Drop a perpendicular from the given center point to the x-axis. Find the intersection of these two lines to get the center of the model circle. Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non-central point.

  • If the two given points lie on a vertical line and the given center is above the other given point:

Draw a circle around the intersection of the vertical line and the x-axis which passes through the given central point. Draw a horizontal line through the non-central point. Construct the tangent to the circle at its intersection with that horizontal line.

The midpoint between the intersection of the tangent with the vertical line and the given non-central point is the center of the model circle. Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non-central point.

  • If the two given points lie on a vertical line and the given center is below the other given point:

Draw a circle around the intersection of the vertical line and the x-axis which passes through the given central point. Draw a line tangent to the circle which passes through the given non-central point. Draw a horizontal line through that point of tangency and find its intersection with the vertical line.

The midpoint between that intersection and the given non-central point is the center of the model circle. Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non-central point.

Given a circle find its (hyperbolic) center edit

Drop a perpendicular p from the Euclidean center of the circle to the x-axis.

Let point q be the intersection of this line and the x- axis.

Draw a line tangent to the circle going through q.

Draw the half circle h with center q going through the point where the tangent and the circle meet.

The (hyperbolic) center is the point where h and p intersect.[3]

Other constructions edit

  • Creating the point which is the intersection of two existing lines, if they intersect:

Find the intersection of the two given semicircles (or vertical lines).

  • Creating the one or two points in the intersection of a line and a circle (if they intersect):

Find the intersection of the given semicircle (or vertical line) with the given circle.

  • Creating the one or two points in the intersection of two circles (if they intersect):

Find the intersection of the two given circles.

Symmetry groups edit

 
Stellated regular heptagonal tiling of the model

The projective linear group PGL(2,C) acts on the Riemann sphere by the Möbius transformations. The subgroup that maps the upper half-plane, H, onto itself is PSL(2,R), the transforms with real coefficients, and these act transitively and isometrically on the upper half-plane, making it a homogeneous space.

There are four closely related Lie groups that act on the upper half-plane by fractional linear transformations and preserve the hyperbolic distance.

  • The special linear group SL(2,R) which consists of the set of 2×2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals +1. Note that many texts (including Wikipedia) often say SL(2,R) when they really mean PSL(2,R).
  • The group S*L(2,R) consisting of the set of 2×2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals +1 or −1. Note that SL(2,R) is a subgroup of this group.
  • The projective special linear group PSL(2,R) = SL(2,R)/{±I}, consisting of the matrices in SL(2,R) modulo plus or minus the identity matrix.
  • The group PS*L(2,R) = S*L(2,R)/{±I}=PGL(2,R) is again a projective group, and again, modulo plus or minus the identity matrix. PSL(2,R) is contained as an index-two normal subgroup, the other coset being the set of 2×2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals −1, modulo plus or minus the identity.

The relationship of these groups to the Poincaré model is as follows:

  • The group of all isometries of H, sometimes denoted as Isom(H), is isomorphic to PS*L(2,R). This includes both the orientation preserving and the orientation-reversing isometries. The orientation-reversing map (the mirror map) is  .
  • The group of orientation-preserving isometries of H, sometimes denoted as Isom+(H), is isomorphic to PSL(2,R).

Important subgroups of the isometry group are the Fuchsian groups.

One also frequently sees the modular group SL(2,Z). This group is important in two ways. First, it is a symmetry group of the square 2x2 lattice of points. Thus, functions that are periodic on a square grid, such as modular forms and elliptic functions, will thus inherit an SL(2,Z) symmetry from the grid. Second, SL(2,Z) is of course a subgroup of SL(2,R), and thus has a hyperbolic behavior embedded in it. In particular, SL(2,Z) can be used to tessellate the hyperbolic plane into cells of equal (Poincaré) area.

Isometric symmetry edit

The group action of the projective special linear group   on   is defined by

 

Note that the action is transitive: for any  , there exists a   such that  . It is also faithful, in that if   for all   then g = e.

The stabilizer or isotropy subgroup of an element   is the set of   which leave z unchanged: gz = z. The stabilizer of i is the rotation group

 

Since any element   is mapped to i by some element of  , this means that the isotropy subgroup of any z is isomorphic to SO(2). Thus,  . Alternatively, the bundle of unit-length tangent vectors on the upper half-plane, called the unit tangent bundle, is isomorphic to  .

The upper half-plane is tessellated into free regular sets by the modular group  

Geodesics edit

The geodesics for this metric tensor are circular arcs perpendicular to the real axis (half-circles whose origin is on the real axis) and straight vertical lines ending on the real axis.

The unit-speed geodesic going up vertically, through the point i is given by

 

Because PSL(2,R) acts transitively by isometries of the upper half-plane, this geodesic is mapped into the other geodesics through the action of PSL(2,R). Thus, the general unit-speed geodesic is given by

 

This provides a basic description of the geodesic flow on the unit-length tangent bundle (complex line bundle) on the upper half-plane. Starting with this model, one can obtain the flow on arbitrary Riemann surfaces, as described in the article on the Anosov flow.

The model in three dimensions edit

The metric of the model on the half- space   is given by

 

where s measures length along a possibly curved line. The straight lines in the hyperbolic space (geodesics for this metric tensor, i.e. curves which minimize the distance) are represented in this model by circular arcs normal to the z = 0-plane (half-circles whose origin is on the z = 0-plane) and straight vertical rays normal to the z = 0-plane.

The distance between two points   and   measured in this metric along such a geodesic is:

 

The model in n dimensions edit

This model can be generalized to model an   dimensional hyperbolic space by replacing the real number x by a vector in an n dimensional Euclidean vector space.

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ "Distance formula for points in the Poincare half plane model on a "vertical geodesic"". mathematics stackexchange. August 6, 2015. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  2. ^ Bochaca, Judit Abardia. "Tools to work with the Half-Plane model". Tools to work with the Half-Plane mode. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  3. ^ Flavors of Geometry, MSRI Publications, Volume 31, 1997, Hyperbolic Geometry, J. W. Cannon, W. J. Floyd, R. Kenyon and W. R. Parry, page 87, Figure 19. Constructing the hyperbolic center of a circle
Sources

poincaré, half, plane, model, euclidean, geometry, upper, half, plane, denoted, below, displaystyle, langle, rangle, mathbb, together, with, metric, poincaré, metric, that, makes, model, dimensional, hyperbolic, geometry, parallel, rays, poincare, half, plane,. In non Euclidean geometry the Poincare half plane model is the upper half plane denoted below as H x y y gt 0 x y R displaystyle langle x y rangle mid y gt 0 x y in mathbb R together with a metric the Poincare metric that makes it a model of two dimensional hyperbolic geometry Parallel rays in Poincare half plane model of hyperbolic geometry Equivalently the Poincare half plane model is sometimes described as a complex plane where the imaginary part the y coordinate mentioned above is positive The Poincare half plane model is named after Henri Poincare but it originated with Eugenio Beltrami who used it along with the Klein model and the Poincare disk model to show that hyperbolic geometry was equiconsistent with Euclidean geometry This model is conformal which means that the angles measured at a point are the same in the model as they are in the actual hyperbolic plane The Cayley transform provides an isometry between the half plane model and the Poincare disk model This model can be generalized to model an n 1 displaystyle n 1 dimensional hyperbolic space by replacing the real number x by a vector in an n dimensional Euclidean vector space Contents 1 Metric 1 1 Distance calculation 2 Special points and curves 2 1 Euclidean synopsis 3 Compass and straightedge constructions 3 1 Creating the line through two existing points 3 2 Creating the circle through one point with center another point 3 3 Given a circle find its hyperbolic center 3 4 Other constructions 4 Symmetry groups 5 Isometric symmetry 6 Geodesics 7 The model in three dimensions 8 The model in n dimensions 9 See also 10 ReferencesMetric editThe metric of the model on the half plane x y y gt 0 displaystyle langle x y rangle mid y gt 0 nbsp is d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 y 2 displaystyle ds 2 frac dx 2 dy 2 y 2 nbsp where s measures the length along a possibly curved line The straight lines in the hyperbolic plane geodesics for this metric tensor i e curves which minimize the distance are represented in this model by circular arcs perpendicular to the x axis half circles whose centers are on the x axis and straight vertical rays perpendicular to the x axis Distance calculation edit nbsp The distance between two points in the half plane model can be computed in terms of Euclidean distances in an isosceles trapezoid formed by the points and their reflection across the x axis a side length s a diagonal d and two heights h1 and h2 It is the logarithm dist p1 p2 log s d 2 h1h2 nbsp Distance between two points can alternately be computed using ratios of Euclidean distances to the ideal points at the ends of the hyperbolic line nbsp Distance from the apex of a semicircle to another point on it is the inverse Gudermannian function of the central angle If p 1 x 1 y 1 textstyle p 1 langle x 1 y 1 rangle nbsp and p 2 x 2 y 2 textstyle p 2 langle x 2 y 2 rangle nbsp are two points in the half plane y gt 0 textstyle y gt 0 nbsp and p 1 x 1 y 1 textstyle tilde p 1 langle x 1 y 1 rangle nbsp is the reflection of p 1 textstyle p 1 nbsp across the x axis into the lower half plane the distance between the two points under the hyperbolic plane metric is dist p 1 p 2 2 arsinh p 2 p 1 2 y 1 y 2 2 artanh p 2 p 1 p 2 p 1 2 ln p 2 p 1 p 2 p 1 2 y 1 y 2 displaystyle begin aligned operatorname dist p 1 p 2 amp 2 operatorname arsinh frac p 2 p 1 2 sqrt y 1 y 2 10mu amp 2 operatorname artanh frac p 2 p 1 p 2 tilde p 1 10mu amp 2 ln frac p 2 p 1 p 2 tilde p 1 2 sqrt y 1 y 2 end aligned nbsp where p 2 p 1 x 2 x 1 2 y 2 y 1 2 textstyle p 2 p 1 sqrt x 2 x 1 2 y 2 y 1 2 nbsp is the Euclidean distance between points p 1 textstyle p 1 nbsp and p 2 textstyle p 2 nbsp arsinh x ln x x 2 1 textstyle operatorname arsinh x ln bigl x sqrt x 2 1 bigr nbsp is the inverse hyperbolic sine and artanh x 1 2 ln 1 x 1 x textstyle operatorname artanh x frac 1 2 ln left 1 x 1 x right nbsp is the inverse hyperbolic tangent This 2 arsinh textstyle 2 operatorname arsinh nbsp formula can be thought of as coming from the chord length in the Minkowski metric between points in the hyperboloid model chord p 1 p 2 2 sinh 1 2 dist p 1 p 2 textstyle operatorname chord p 1 p 2 2 sinh tfrac 1 2 operatorname dist p 1 p 2 nbsp analogous to finding arclength on a sphere in terms of chord length This 2 artanh textstyle 2 operatorname artanh nbsp formula can be thought of as coming from Euclidean distance in the Poincare disk model with one point at the origin analogous to finding arclength on the sphere by taking a stereographic projection centered on one point and measuring the Euclidean distance in the plane from the origin to the other point If the two points p 1 textstyle p 1 nbsp and p 2 textstyle p 2 nbsp are on a hyperbolic line Euclidean half circle which intersects the x axis at the ideal points p 0 x 0 0 textstyle p 0 langle x 0 0 rangle nbsp and p 3 x 3 0 textstyle p 3 langle x 3 0 rangle nbsp the distance from p 1 textstyle p 1 nbsp to p 2 textstyle p 2 nbsp is dist p 1 p 2 ln p 2 p 0 p 1 p 3 p 1 p 0 p 2 p 3 displaystyle operatorname dist p 1 p 2 left ln frac p 2 p 0 p 1 p 3 p 1 p 0 p 2 p 3 right nbsp Cf Cross ratio Some special cases can be simplified Two points with the same x textstyle x nbsp coordinate 1 dist x y 1 x y 2 ln y 2 y 1 ln y 2 ln y 1 displaystyle operatorname dist langle x y 1 rangle langle x y 2 rangle left ln frac y 2 y 1 right left ln y 2 ln y 1 right nbsp Two points with the same y textstyle y nbsp coordinate dist x 1 y x 2 y 2 arsinh x 2 x 1 2 y displaystyle operatorname dist left langle x 1 y rangle langle x 2 y rangle right 2 operatorname arsinh frac x 2 x 1 2y nbsp One point x 1 r textstyle langle x 1 r rangle nbsp at the apex of the semicircle x x 1 2 y 2 r 2 textstyle x x 1 2 y 2 r 2 nbsp and another point at a central angle of ϕ textstyle phi nbsp dist x 1 r x 1 r sin ϕ r cos ϕ 2 artanh tan 1 2 ϕ gd 1 ϕ displaystyle operatorname dist langle x 1 r rangle langle x 1 pm r sin phi r cos phi rangle 2 operatorname artanh bigl tan tfrac 1 2 phi bigr operatorname gd 1 phi nbsp where gd 1 textstyle operatorname gd 1 nbsp is the inverse Gudermannian function and artanh x 1 2 ln 1 x 1 x textstyle operatorname artanh x tfrac 1 2 ln dfrac 1 x 1 x nbsp is the inverse hyperbolic tangent Special points and curves editIdeal points points at infinity in the Poincare half plane model are of two kinds the points on the x axis and one imaginary point at y displaystyle y infty nbsp which is the ideal point to which all lines orthogonal to the x axis converge Straight lines geodesics the shortest path between the points contained within it are modeled by either half circles whose origin is on the x axis straight vertical rays orthogonal to the x axis A circle curves equidistant from a central point with center x y displaystyle x y nbsp and radius r displaystyle r nbsp is modeled by a circle with center x y cosh r displaystyle x y cosh r nbsp and radius y sinh r displaystyle y sinh r nbsp dd A hypercycle a curve equidistant from a straight line its axis is modeled by either a circular arc which intersects the x axis at the same two ideal points as the half circle which models its axis but at an acute or obtuse angle a straight line which intersects the x axis at the same point as the vertical line which models its axis but at an acute or obtuse angle A horocycle a curve whose normals all converge asymptotically in the same direction its center is modeled by either a circle tangent to the x axis but excluding the ideal point of intersection which is its center a line parallel to the x axis in this case the center is the ideal point at y displaystyle y infty nbsp Euclidean synopsis edit A Euclidean circle with center x e y e displaystyle langle x e y e rangle nbsp and radius r e displaystyle r e nbsp represents when the circle is completely inside the halfplane a hyperbolic circle with center x e y e 2 r e 2 displaystyle left x e sqrt y e 2 r e 2 right nbsp dd and radius1 2 ln y e r e y e r e displaystyle frac 1 2 ln left frac y e r e y e r e right nbsp dd when the circle is completely inside the halfplane and touches the boundary a horocycle centered around the ideal point x e 0 displaystyle x e 0 nbsp when the circle intersects the boundary orthogonal y e 0 displaystyle y e 0 nbsp a hyperbolic line when the circle intersects the boundary non orthogonal a hypercycle Compass and straightedge constructions editSee also Compass and straightedge constructions Here is how one can use compass and straightedge constructions in the model to achieve the effect of the basic constructions in the hyperbolic plane 2 For example how to construct the half circle in the Euclidean half plane which models a line on the hyperbolic plane through two given points Creating the line through two existing points edit Draw the line segment between the two points Construct the perpendicular bisector of the line segment Find its intersection with the x axis Draw the circle around the intersection which passes through the given points Erase the part which is on or below the x axis Or in the special case where the two given points lie on a vertical line draw that vertical line through the two points and erase the part which is on or below the x axis Creating the circle through one point with center another point edit If the two points are not on a vertical line Draw the radial line half circle between the two given points as in the previous case Construct a tangent to that line at the non central point Drop a perpendicular from the given center point to the x axis Find the intersection of these two lines to get the center of the model circle Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non central point If the two given points lie on a vertical line and the given center is above the other given point Draw a circle around the intersection of the vertical line and the x axis which passes through the given central point Draw a horizontal line through the non central point Construct the tangent to the circle at its intersection with that horizontal line The midpoint between the intersection of the tangent with the vertical line and the given non central point is the center of the model circle Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non central point If the two given points lie on a vertical line and the given center is below the other given point Draw a circle around the intersection of the vertical line and the x axis which passes through the given central point Draw a line tangent to the circle which passes through the given non central point Draw a horizontal line through that point of tangency and find its intersection with the vertical line The midpoint between that intersection and the given non central point is the center of the model circle Draw the model circle around that new center and passing through the given non central point Given a circle find its hyperbolic center edit Drop a perpendicular p from the Euclidean center of the circle to the x axis Let point q be the intersection of this line and the x axis Draw a line tangent to the circle going through q Draw the half circle h with center q going through the point where the tangent and the circle meet The hyperbolic center is the point where h and p intersect 3 Other constructions edit Creating the point which is the intersection of two existing lines if they intersect Find the intersection of the two given semicircles or vertical lines Creating the one or two points in the intersection of a line and a circle if they intersect Find the intersection of the given semicircle or vertical line with the given circle Creating the one or two points in the intersection of two circles if they intersect Find the intersection of the two given circles Symmetry groups edit nbsp Stellated regular heptagonal tiling of the model The projective linear group PGL 2 C acts on the Riemann sphere by the Mobius transformations The subgroup that maps the upper half plane H onto itself is PSL 2 R the transforms with real coefficients and these act transitively and isometrically on the upper half plane making it a homogeneous space There are four closely related Lie groups that act on the upper half plane by fractional linear transformations and preserve the hyperbolic distance The special linear group SL 2 R which consists of the set of 2 2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals 1 Note that many texts including Wikipedia often say SL 2 R when they really mean PSL 2 R The group S L 2 R consisting of the set of 2 2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals 1 or 1 Note that SL 2 R is a subgroup of this group The projective special linear group PSL 2 R SL 2 R I consisting of the matrices in SL 2 R modulo plus or minus the identity matrix The group PS L 2 R S L 2 R I PGL 2 R is again a projective group and again modulo plus or minus the identity matrix PSL 2 R is contained as an index two normal subgroup the other coset being the set of 2 2 matrices with real entries whose determinant equals 1 modulo plus or minus the identity The relationship of these groups to the Poincare model is as follows The group of all isometries of H sometimes denoted as Isom H is isomorphic to PS L 2 R This includes both the orientation preserving and the orientation reversing isometries The orientation reversing map the mirror map is z z displaystyle z rightarrow overline z nbsp The group of orientation preserving isometries of H sometimes denoted as Isom H is isomorphic to PSL 2 R Important subgroups of the isometry group are the Fuchsian groups One also frequently sees the modular group SL 2 Z This group is important in two ways First it is a symmetry group of the square 2x2 lattice of points Thus functions that are periodic on a square grid such as modular forms and elliptic functions will thus inherit an SL 2 Z symmetry from the grid Second SL 2 Z is of course a subgroup of SL 2 R and thus has a hyperbolic behavior embedded in it In particular SL 2 Z can be used to tessellate the hyperbolic plane into cells of equal Poincare area Isometric symmetry editThe group action of the projective special linear group P S L 2 R displaystyle rm PSL 2 mathbb R nbsp on H displaystyle mathbb H nbsp is defined by a b c d z a z b c z d a c z 2 b d a d b c ℜ z i a d b c ℑ z c z d 2 displaystyle begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix cdot z frac az b cz d frac ac z 2 bd ad bc Re z i ad bc Im z cz d 2 nbsp Note that the action is transitive for any z 1 z 2 H displaystyle z 1 z 2 in mathbb H nbsp there exists a g P S L 2 R displaystyle g in rm PSL 2 mathbb R nbsp such that g z 1 z 2 displaystyle gz 1 z 2 nbsp It is also faithful in that if g z z displaystyle gz z nbsp for all z H displaystyle z in mathbb H nbsp then g e The stabilizer or isotropy subgroup of an element z H displaystyle z in mathbb H nbsp is the set of g P S L 2 R displaystyle g in rm PSL 2 mathbb R nbsp which leave z unchanged gz z The stabilizer of i is the rotation group S O 2 cos 8 sin 8 sin 8 cos 8 8 R displaystyle rm SO 2 left left begin pmatrix cos theta amp sin theta sin theta amp cos theta end pmatrix right theta in mathbb R right nbsp Since any element z H displaystyle z in mathbb H nbsp is mapped to i by some element of P S L 2 R displaystyle rm PSL 2 mathbb R nbsp this means that the isotropy subgroup of any z is isomorphic to SO 2 Thus H P S L 2 R S O 2 displaystyle mathbb H rm PSL 2 mathbb R rm SO 2 nbsp Alternatively the bundle of unit length tangent vectors on the upper half plane called the unit tangent bundle is isomorphic to P S L 2 R displaystyle rm PSL 2 mathbb R nbsp The upper half plane is tessellated into free regular sets by the modular group S L 2 Z displaystyle rm SL 2 mathbb Z nbsp Geodesics editMain article Anosov flow The geodesics for this metric tensor are circular arcs perpendicular to the real axis half circles whose origin is on the real axis and straight vertical lines ending on the real axis The unit speed geodesic going up vertically through the point i is given by g t e t 2 0 0 e t 2 i i e t displaystyle gamma t begin pmatrix e t 2 amp 0 0 amp e t 2 end pmatrix cdot i ie t nbsp Because PSL 2 R acts transitively by isometries of the upper half plane this geodesic is mapped into the other geodesics through the action of PSL 2 R Thus the general unit speed geodesic is given by g t a b c d e t 2 0 0 e t 2 i a i e t b c i e t d displaystyle gamma t begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix begin pmatrix e t 2 amp 0 0 amp e t 2 end pmatrix cdot i frac aie t b cie t d nbsp This provides a basic description of the geodesic flow on the unit length tangent bundle complex line bundle on the upper half plane Starting with this model one can obtain the flow on arbitrary Riemann surfaces as described in the article on the Anosov flow The model in three dimensions editThe metric of the model on the half space x y z z gt 0 textstyle langle x y z rangle mid z gt 0 nbsp is given by d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 z 2 displaystyle ds 2 frac dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 z 2 nbsp where s measures length along a possibly curved line The straight lines in the hyperbolic space geodesics for this metric tensor i e curves which minimize the distance are represented in this model by circular arcs normal to the z 0 plane half circles whose origin is on the z 0 plane and straight vertical rays normal to the z 0 plane The distance between two points p 1 x 1 y 1 z 1 textstyle p 1 langle x 1 y 1 z 1 rangle nbsp and p 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 textstyle p 2 langle x 2 y 2 z 2 rangle nbsp measured in this metric along such a geodesic is dist p 1 p 2 2 arsinh p 2 p 1 2 z 1 z 2 displaystyle operatorname dist p 1 p 2 2 operatorname arsinh frac p 2 p 1 2 sqrt z 1 z 2 nbsp The model in n dimensions editThis model can be generalized to model an n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp dimensional hyperbolic space by replacing the real number x by a vector in an n dimensional Euclidean vector space See also editAngle of parallelism Anosov flow Fuchsian group Fuchsian model Hyperbolic motion Kleinian model Models of the hyperbolic plane Pseudosphere Schwarz Ahlfors Pick theorem Ultraparallel theoremReferences editNotes Distance formula for points in the Poincare half plane model on a vertical geodesic mathematics stackexchange August 6 2015 Retrieved 19 September 2015 Bochaca Judit Abardia Tools to work with the Half Plane model Tools to work with the Half Plane mode Retrieved 25 June 2015 Flavors of Geometry MSRI Publications Volume 31 1997 Hyperbolic Geometry J W Cannon W J Floyd R Kenyon and W R Parry page 87 Figure 19 Constructing the hyperbolic center of a circle Sources Eugenio Beltrami Teoria fondamentale degli spazi di curvatura constante Annali di Matematica Pura ed Applicata ser II 2 1868 232 255 Henri Poincare 1882 Theorie des Groupes Fuchsiens Acta Mathematica v 1 p 1 First article in a series exploiting the half plane model An archived copy is freely available On page 52 one can see an example of the semicircle diagrams so characteristic of the model Hershel M Farkas and Irwin Kra Riemann Surfaces 1980 Springer Verlag New York ISBN 0 387 90465 4 Jurgen Jost Compact Riemann Surfaces 2002 Springer Verlag New York ISBN 3 540 43299 X See Section 2 3 Saul Stahl The Poincare Half Plane Jones and Bartlett 1993 ISBN 0 86720 298 X John Stillwell 1998 Numbers and Geometry pp 100 104 Springer Verlag NY ISBN 0 387 98289 2 An elementary introduction to the Poincare half plane model of the hyperbolic plane Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poincare half plane model amp oldid 1155587333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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