
In
geometry
Geometry (; ) is a branch of mathematics concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. Geometry is, along with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. A mathematician w ...
, the cross-ratio, also called the double ratio and anharmonic ratio, is a number associated with a list of four
collinear
In geometry, collinearity of a set of Point (geometry), points is the property of their lying on a single Line (geometry), line. A set of points with this property is said to be collinear (sometimes spelled as colinear). In greater generality, t ...
points, particularly points on a
projective line
In projective geometry and mathematics more generally, a projective line is, roughly speaking, the extension of a usual line by a point called a '' point at infinity''. The statement and the proof of many theorems of geometry are simplified by the ...
. Given four points , , , on a line, their cross ratio is defined as
:
where an orientation of the line determines the sign of each distance and the distance is measured as projected into
Euclidean space
Euclidean space is the fundamental space of geometry, intended to represent physical space. Originally, in Euclid's ''Elements'', it was the three-dimensional space of Euclidean geometry, but in modern mathematics there are ''Euclidean spaces ...
. (If one of the four points is the line's point at infinity, then the two distances involving that point are dropped from the formula.)
The point is the
harmonic conjugate of with respect to and precisely if the cross-ratio of the quadruple is , called the ''harmonic ratio''. The cross-ratio can therefore be regarded as measuring the quadruple's deviation from this ratio; hence the name ''anharmonic ratio''.
The cross-ratio is preserved by
linear fractional transformations. It is essentially the only projective
invariant of a quadruple of collinear points; this underlies its importance for
projective geometry
In mathematics, projective geometry is the study of geometric properties that are invariant with respect to projective transformations. This means that, compared to elementary Euclidean geometry, projective geometry has a different setting (''p ...
.
The cross-ratio had been defined in deep antiquity, possibly already by
Euclid
Euclid (; ; BC) was an ancient Greek mathematician active as a geometer and logician. Considered the "father of geometry", he is chiefly known for the '' Elements'' treatise, which established the foundations of geometry that largely domina ...
, and was considered by
Pappus, who noted its key invariance property. It was extensively studied in the 19th century.
Variants of this concept exist for a quadruple of concurrent lines on the projective plane and a quadruple of points on the
Riemann sphere.
In the
Cayley–Klein model of
hyperbolic geometry
In mathematics, hyperbolic geometry (also called Lobachevskian geometry or János Bolyai, Bolyai–Nikolai Lobachevsky, Lobachevskian geometry) is a non-Euclidean geometry. The parallel postulate of Euclidean geometry is replaced with:
:For a ...
, the distance between points is expressed in terms of a certain cross-ratio.
Terminology and history
Pappus of Alexandria
Pappus of Alexandria (; ; AD) was a Greek mathematics, Greek mathematician of late antiquity known for his ''Synagoge'' (Συναγωγή) or ''Collection'' (), and for Pappus's hexagon theorem in projective geometry. Almost nothing is known a ...
made implicit use of concepts equivalent to the cross-ratio in his ''Collection: Book VII''. Early users of Pappus included
Isaac Newton
Sir Isaac Newton () was an English polymath active as a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, alchemist, theologian, and author. Newton was a key figure in the Scientific Revolution and the Age of Enlightenment, Enlightenment that followed ...
,
Michel Chasles, and
Robert Simson. In 1986 Alexander Jones made a translation of the original by Pappus, then wrote a commentary on how the lemmas of Pappus relate to modern terminology.
Modern use of the cross ratio in projective geometry began with
Lazare Carnot
Lazare Nicolas Marguerite, Comte Carnot (; 13 May 1753 – 2 August 1823) was a French mathematician, physicist, military officer, politician and a leading member of the Committee of Public Safety during the French Revolution. His military refor ...
in 1803 with his book ''Géométrie de Position''. Chasles coined the French term
nharmonic ratioin 1837. German geometers call it
ouble ratio
Carl von Staudt was unsatisfied with past definitions of the cross-ratio relying on algebraic manipulation of Euclidean distances rather than being based purely on synthetic projective geometry concepts. In 1847, von Staudt demonstrated that the algebraic structure is implicit in projective geometry, by creating an algebra based on construction of the
projective harmonic conjugate
In projective geometry, the harmonic conjugate point of a point on the real projective line with respect to two other points is defined by the following construction:
:Given three collinear points , let be a point not lying on their join and le ...
, which he called a ''throw'' (German: ''Wurf''): given three points on a line, the harmonic conjugate is a fourth point that makes the cross ratio equal to . His
''algebra of throws'' provides an approach to numerical propositions, usually taken as axioms, but proven in projective geometry.
The English term "cross-ratio" was introduced in 1878 by
William Kingdon Clifford.
Definition
If , , , and are four points on an oriented
affine line, their cross ratio is:
:
with the notation
defined to mean the signed ratio of the displacement from to to the displacement from to . For collinear displacements this is a
dimensionless quantity
Dimensionless quantities, or quantities of dimension one, are quantities implicitly defined in a manner that prevents their aggregation into unit of measurement, units of measurement. ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0. Typically expressed as ratios that a ...
.
If the displacements themselves are taken to be signed real numbers, then the cross ratio between points can be written
:
If
is the
projectively extended real line, the cross-ratio of four distinct numbers
in
is given by
:
When one of
is the
point at infinity this reduces to e.g.
:
The same formulas can be applied to four distinct
complex number
In mathematics, a complex number is an element of a number system that extends the real numbers with a specific element denoted , called the imaginary unit and satisfying the equation i^= -1; every complex number can be expressed in the for ...
s or, more generally, to elements of any
field, and can also be projectively extended as above to the case when one of them is
Properties
The cross ratio of the four collinear points , , , and can be written as
:
where
describes the ratio with which the point divides the line segment , and
describes the ratio with which the point divides that same line segment. The cross ratio then appears as a ratio of ratios, describing how the two points and are situated with respect to the line segment . As long as the points , , , and are distinct, the cross ratio will be a non-zero real number. We can easily deduce that
* if and only if one of the points or lies between the points and and the other does not
*
*
*
Six cross-ratios
Four points can be ordered in ways, but there are only six ways for partitioning them into two unordered pairs. Thus, four points can have only six different cross-ratios, which are related as:
:
See ''
Anharmonic group'' below.
Projective geometry
The cross-ratio is a projective
invariant in the sense that it is preserved by the
projective transformations of a projective line.
In particular, if four points lie on a straight line
in
then their cross-ratio is a well-defined quantity, because any choice of the origin and even of the scale on the line will yield the same value of the cross-ratio.
Furthermore, let
be four distinct lines in the plane passing through the same point
. Then any line
not passing through
intersects these lines in four distinct points
(if
is
parallel to
then the corresponding intersection point is "at infinity"). It turns out that the cross-ratio of these points (taken in a fixed order) does not depend on the choice of a line
, and hence it is an invariant of the 4-tuple of lines
This can be understood as follows: if
and
are two lines not passing through
then the perspective transformation from
to
with the center
is a projective transformation that takes the quadruple
of points on
into the quadruple
of points on
.
Therefore, the invariance of the cross-ratio under projective automorphisms of the line implies (in fact, is equivalent to) the independence of the cross-ratio of the four
collinear
In geometry, collinearity of a set of Point (geometry), points is the property of their lying on a single Line (geometry), line. A set of points with this property is said to be collinear (sometimes spelled as colinear). In greater generality, t ...
points
on the lines
from the choice of the line that contains them.
Definition in homogeneous coordinates
If four collinear points are represented in
homogeneous coordinates by vectors
such that
and
, then their cross-ratio is
.
Role in non-Euclidean geometry
Arthur Cayley and
Felix Klein found an application of the cross-ratio to
non-Euclidean geometry. Given a nonsingular
conic in the real
projective plane, its
stabilizer in the
projective group acts transitively on the points in the interior of
. However, there is an invariant for the action of
on ''pairs'' of points. In fact, every such invariant is expressible as a function of the appropriate cross-ratio.
Hyperbolic geometry
Explicitly, let the conic be the
unit circle
In mathematics, a unit circle is a circle of unit radius—that is, a radius of 1. Frequently, especially in trigonometry, the unit circle is the circle of radius 1 centered at the origin (0, 0) in the Cartesian coordinate system in the Eucli ...
. For any two points and , inside the unit circle . If the line connecting them intersects the circle in two points, and and the points are, in order, . Then the hyperbolic distance between and in the
Cayley–Klein model of the
hyperbolic plane can be expressed as
:
(the factor one half is needed to make the
curvature
In mathematics, curvature is any of several strongly related concepts in geometry that intuitively measure the amount by which a curve deviates from being a straight line or by which a surface deviates from being a plane. If a curve or su ...
). Since the cross-ratio is invariant under projective transformations, it follows that the hyperbolic distance is invariant under the projective transformations that preserve the conic .
Conversely, the group acts transitively on the set of pairs of points in the unit disk at a fixed hyperbolic distance.
Later, partly through the influence of
Henri Poincaré
Jules Henri Poincaré (, ; ; 29 April 185417 July 1912) was a French mathematician, Theoretical physics, theoretical physicist, engineer, and philosophy of science, philosopher of science. He is often described as a polymath, and in mathemati ...
, the cross ratio of four
complex number
In mathematics, a complex number is an element of a number system that extends the real numbers with a specific element denoted , called the imaginary unit and satisfying the equation i^= -1; every complex number can be expressed in the for ...
s on a circle was used for hyperbolic metrics. Being on a circle means the four points are the image of four real points under a
Möbius transformation, and hence the cross ratio is a real number. The
Poincaré half-plane model and
Poincaré disk model are two models of hyperbolic geometry in the
complex projective line.
These models are instances of
Cayley–Klein metrics.
Anharmonic group and Klein four-group
The cross-ratio may be defined by any of these four expressions:
:
These differ by the following
permutation
In mathematics, a permutation of a set can mean one of two different things:
* an arrangement of its members in a sequence or linear order, or
* the act or process of changing the linear order of an ordered set.
An example of the first mean ...
s of the variables (in
cycle notation):
:
We may consider the permutations of the four variables as an
action of the
symmetric group
In abstract algebra, the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself, and whose group operation is the composition of functions. In particular, the finite symmetric grou ...
on functions of the four variables. Since the above four permutations leave the cross ratio unaltered, they form the
stabilizer of the cross-ratio under this action, and this induces an
effective action of the
quotient group
A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored out"). For ex ...
on the orbit of the cross-ratio. The four permutations in provide a realization of the
Klein four-group
In mathematics, the Klein four-group is an abelian group with four elements, in which each element is Involution (mathematics), self-inverse (composing it with itself produces the identity) and in which composing any two of the three non-identi ...
in , and the quotient
is isomorphic to the symmetric group .
Thus, the other permutations of the four variables alter the cross-ratio to give the following six values, which are the orbit of the six-element group
:
:

As functions of
these are examples of
Möbius transformations, which under composition of functions form the Mobius group . The six transformations form a subgroup known as the anharmonic group, again isomorphic to . They are the torsion elements (
elliptic transforms) in . Namely,
,
, and
are of order with respective
fixed points and
(namely, the orbit of the harmonic cross-ratio). Meanwhile, the elements
and
are of order in , and each fixes both values
of the "most symmetric" cross-ratio (the solutions to
, the
primitive sixth
roots of unity). The order elements exchange these two elements (as they do any pair other than their fixed points), and thus the action of the anharmonic group on
gives the quotient map of symmetric groups
.
Further, the fixed points of the individual -cycles are, respectively,
and
and this set is also preserved and permuted by the -cycles. Geometrically, this can be visualized as the
rotation group of the
trigonal dihedron, which is isomorphic to the
dihedral group
In mathematics, a dihedral group is the group (mathematics), group of symmetry, symmetries of a regular polygon, which includes rotational symmetry, rotations and reflection symmetry, reflections. Dihedral groups are among the simplest example ...
of the triangle , as illustrated at right. Algebraically, this corresponds to the action of on the -cycles (its
Sylow 2-subgroups) by conjugation and realizes the isomorphism with the group of
inner automorphisms,
The anharmonic group is generated by
and
Its action on
gives an isomorphism with . It may also be realised as the six Möbius transformations mentioned,
which yields a projective
representation of over any field (since it is defined with integer entries), and is always faithful/injective (since no two terms differ only by ). Over the field with two elements, the projective line only has three points, so this representation is an isomorphism, and is the
exceptional isomorphism . In characteristic , this stabilizes the point