In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, two points of a
sphere
A sphere (from Ancient Greek, Greek , ) is a surface (mathematics), surface analogous to the circle, a curve. In solid geometry, a sphere is the Locus (mathematics), set of points that are all at the same distance from a given point in three ...
(or
n-sphere
In mathematics, an -sphere or hypersphere is an - dimensional generalization of the -dimensional circle and -dimensional sphere to any non-negative integer .
The circle is considered 1-dimensional and the sphere 2-dimensional because a point ...
, including a
circle
A circle is a shape consisting of all point (geometry), points in a plane (mathematics), plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the Centre (geometry), centre. The distance between any point of the circle and the centre is cal ...
) are called antipodal or diametrically opposite if they are the endpoints of a
diameter
In geometry, a diameter of a circle is any straight line segment that passes through the centre of the circle and whose endpoints lie on the circle. It can also be defined as the longest Chord (geometry), chord of the circle. Both definitions a ...
, a straight
line segment
In geometry, a line segment is a part of a line (mathematics), straight line that is bounded by two distinct endpoints (its extreme points), and contains every Point (geometry), point on the line that is between its endpoints. It is a special c ...
between two points on a sphere and passing through its
center.
Given any point on a sphere, its antipodal point is the unique point at greatest
distance
Distance is a numerical or occasionally qualitative measurement of how far apart objects, points, people, or ideas are. In physics or everyday usage, distance may refer to a physical length or an estimation based on other criteria (e.g. "two co ...
, whether measured intrinsically (
great-circle distance
The great-circle distance, orthodromic distance, or spherical distance is the distance between two points on a sphere, measured along the great-circle arc between them. This arc is the shortest path between the two points on the surface of the ...
on the surface of the sphere) or extrinsically (
chordal distance through the sphere's interior). Every
great circle
In mathematics, a great circle or orthodrome is the circular intersection of a sphere and a plane passing through the sphere's center point.
Discussion
Any arc of a great circle is a geodesic of the sphere, so that great circles in spher ...
on a sphere passing through a point also passes through its antipodal point, and there are infinitely many great circles passing through a pair of antipodal points (unlike the situation for any non-antipodal pair of points, which have a unique great circle passing through both). Many results in spherical geometry depend on choosing non-antipodal points, and
degenerate if antipodal points are allowed; for example, a
spherical triangle degenerates to an underspecified
lune
Lune may refer to:
Rivers
*River Lune, in Lancashire and Cumbria, England
*River Lune, Durham, in County Durham, England
*Lune (Weser), a 43 km-long tributary of the Weser in Germany
*Lune River (Tasmania), in south-eastern Tasmania, Australia
Pl ...
if two of the vertices are antipodal.
The point antipodal to a given point is called its antipodes, from the
Greek () meaning "opposite feet"; see . Sometimes the ''s'' is dropped, and this is rendered antipode, a
back-formation
Back-formation is the process or result of creating a neologism, new word via Morphology (linguistics), morphology, typically by removing or substituting actual or supposed affixes from a lexical item, in a way that expands the number of lexemes ...
.
Higher mathematics
The concept of ''antipodal points'' is generalized to
sphere
A sphere (from Ancient Greek, Greek , ) is a surface (mathematics), surface analogous to the circle, a curve. In solid geometry, a sphere is the Locus (mathematics), set of points that are all at the same distance from a given point in three ...
s of any dimension: two points on the sphere are antipodal if they are opposite ''through the centre''. Each line through the centre intersects the sphere in two points, one for each
ray emanating from the centre, and these two points are antipodal.
The
Borsuk–Ulam theorem is a result from
algebraic topology
Algebraic topology is a branch of mathematics that uses tools from abstract algebra to study topological spaces. The basic goal is to find algebraic invariant (mathematics), invariants that classification theorem, classify topological spaces up t ...
dealing with such pairs of points. It says that any
continuous function
In mathematics, a continuous function is a function such that a small variation of the argument induces a small variation of the value of the function. This implies there are no abrupt changes in value, known as '' discontinuities''. More preci ...
from
to
maps some pair of antipodal points in
to the same point in
Here,
denotes the sphere and
is
real coordinate space
In mathematics, the real coordinate space or real coordinate ''n''-space, of dimension , denoted or , is the set of all ordered -tuples of real numbers, that is the set of all sequences of real numbers, also known as '' coordinate vectors''.
...
.
The antipodal map
sends every point on the sphere to its antipodal point. If points on the are represented as
displacement vectors from the sphere's center in Euclidean then two antipodal points are represented by additive inverses
and
and the antipodal map can be defined as
The antipodal map preserves
orientation (is
homotopic to the
identity map
Graph of the identity function on the real numbers
In mathematics, an identity function, also called an identity relation, identity map or identity transformation, is a function that always returns the value that was used as its argument, unc ...
)
when
is odd, and reverses it when
is even. Its
degree is
If antipodal points are identified (considered equivalent), the sphere becomes a model of
real projective space.
See also
*
Cut locus
References
External links
*
* {{planetmath reference, urlname=Antipodal, title=antipodal
Spherical geometry
Point (geometry)