Finite affine planes
Relation with projective planes
An affine plane can be obtained from any projective plane by removing a line and all the points on it, and conversely any affine plane can be used to construct a projective plane by adding a line at infinity, each of whose points is that point at infinity where an equivalence class of parallel lines meets. If the projective plane is non-Desarguesian, the removal of different lines could result in non-isomorphic affine planes. For instance, there are exactly four projective planes of order nine, and seven affine planes of order nine. There is only one affine plane corresponding to the Desarguesian plane of order nine since the collineation group of that projective plane acts transitively on the lines of the plane. Each of the three non-Desarguesian planes of order nine have collineation groups having two orbits on the lines, producing two non-isomorphic affine planes of order nine, depending on which orbit the line to be removed is selected from.Affine translation planes
A line in a projective plane is a translation line if the group of elations with axis acts transitively on the points of the affine plane obtained by removing from the plane . A projective plane with a translation line is called a translation plane and the affine plane obtained by removing the translation line is called an affine translation plane. While in general it is often easier to work with projective planes, in this context the affine planes are preferred and several authors simply use the term translation plane to mean affine translation plane. An alternate view of affine translation planes can be obtained as follows: Let be a -dimensionalGeneralization: -nets
An incidence structure more general than a finite affine plane is a -''net of order'' . This consists of points and lines such that: * Parallelism (as defined in affine planes) is an equivalence relation on the set of lines. * Every line has exactly points, and every parallel class has lines (so each parallel class of lines partitions the point set). * There are parallel classes of lines. Each point lies on exactly lines, one from each parallel class. An -net of order is precisely an affine plane of order . A -''net of order'' is equivalent to a set of mutually orthogonal Latin squares of order .Example: translation nets
For an arbitrary field , let be a set of -dimensional subspaces of the vector space , any two of which intersect only in (called a partial spread). The members of , and their cosets in , form the lines of a translation net on the points of . If this is a -net of order . Starting with an affine translation plane, any subset of the parallel classes will form a translation net. Given a translation net, it is not always possible to add parallel classes to the net to form an affine plane. However, if is an infinite field, any partial spread with fewer than members can be extended and the translation net can be completed to an affine translation plane.Geometric codes
Given the "line/point" incidence matrix of any finite incidence structure, , and any field, the row space of over is a linear code that we can denote by . Another related code that contains information about the incidence structure is the Hull of which is defined as: : where is the orthogonal code to . Not much can be said about these codes at this level of generality, but if the incidence structure has some "regularity" the codes produced this way can be analyzed and information about the codes and the incidence structures can be gleaned from each other. When the incidence structure is a finite affine plane, the codes belong to a class of codes known as ''geometric codes''. How much information the code carries about the affine plane depends in part on the choice of field. If the characteristic of the field does not divide the order of the plane, the code generated is the full space and does not carry any information. On the other hand, * If is an affine plane of order and is a field of characteristic , where divides , then the minimum weight of the code is and all the minimum weight vectors are constant multiples of vectors whose entries are either zero or one. Furthermore, * If is an affine plane of order and is a field of characteristic , then and the minimum weight vectors are precisely the scalar multiples of the (incidence vectors of) lines of . When the geometric code generated is the -ary Reed-Muller Code.Affine spaces
Notes
References
* * * * * *Further reading
* * * * * *{{Citation , last = Stevenson , first = Frederick W. , title = Projective Planes , publisher = W.H. Freeman and Company , place = San Francisco , year = 1972 , isbn = 0-7167-0443-9 Incidence geometry Planes (geometry)