
In
mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the concept of a projective space originated from the visual effect of
perspective, where parallel lines seem to meet ''at infinity''. A projective space may thus be viewed as the extension of a
Euclidean space, or, more generally, an
affine space with
points at infinity, in such a way that there is one point at infinity of each
direction of
parallel lines.
This definition of a projective space has the disadvantage of not being
isotropic, having two different sorts of points, which must be considered separately in proofs. Therefore, other definitions are generally preferred. There are two classes of definitions. In
synthetic geometry, ''point'' and ''line'' are primitive entities that are related by the incidence relation "a point is on a line" or "a line passes through a point", which is subject to the
axioms of projective geometry. For some such set of axioms, the projective spaces that are defined have been shown to be equivalent to those resulting from the following definition, which is more often encountered in modern textbooks.
Using
linear algebra, a projective space of dimension is defined as the set of the
vector line
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set whose elements, often called ''vectors'', may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called ''scalars''. Scalars are often real numbers, but can ...
s (that is, vector subspaces of dimension one) in a
vector space of dimension . Equivalently, it is the
quotient set of by the
equivalence relation
In mathematics, an equivalence relation is a binary relation that is reflexive, symmetric and transitive. The equipollence relation between line segments in geometry is a common example of an equivalence relation.
Each equivalence relatio ...
"being on the same vector line". As a vector line intersects the
unit sphere of in two
antipodal points, projective spaces can be equivalently defined as spheres in which antipodal points are identified. A projective space of dimension 1 is a
projective line, and a projective space of dimension 2 is a
projective plane.
Projective spaces are widely used in
geometry
Geometry (; ) is, with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. It is concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. A mathematician who works in the field of geometry is c ...
, as allowing simpler statements and simpler proofs. For example, in
affine geometry, two distinct lines in a plane intersect in at most one point, while, in
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, pr ...
, they intersect in exactly one point. Also, there is only one class of
conic section
In mathematics, a conic section, quadratic curve or conic is a curve obtained as the intersection of the surface of a cone with a plane. The three types of conic section are the hyperbola, the parabola, and the ellipse; the circle is a ...
s, which can be distinguished only by their intersections with the line at infinity: two intersection points for
hyperbolas; one for the
parabola, which is tangent to the line at infinity; and no real intersection point of
ellipses.
In
topology
In mathematics, topology (from the Greek words , and ) is concerned with the properties of a geometric object that are preserved under continuous deformations, such as stretching, twisting, crumpling, and bending; that is, without closing ho ...
, and more specifically in
manifold theory, projective spaces play a fundamental role, being typical examples of
non-orientable manifolds.
Motivation

As outlined above, projective spaces were introduced for formalizing statements like "two
coplanar lines intersect in exactly one point, and this point is at infinity if the lines are
parallel." Such statements are suggested by the study of
perspective, which may be considered as a
central projection of the
three dimensional space onto a
plane (see
Pinhole camera model). More precisely, the entrance pupil of a camera or of the eye of an observer is the ''center of projection'', and the image is formed on the ''projection plane''.
Mathematically, the center of projection is a point of the space (the intersection of the axes in the figure); the projection plane (, in blue on the figure) is a plane not passing through , which is often chosen to be the plane of equation , when
Cartesian coordinates are considered. Then, the central projection maps a point to the intersection of the line with the projection plane. Such an intersection exists if and only if the point does not belong to the plane (, in green on the figure) that passes through and is parallel to .
It follows that the lines passing through split in two disjoint subsets: the lines that are not contained in , which are in one to one correspondence with the points of , and those contained in , which are in one to one correspondence with the directions of parallel lines in . This suggests to define the ''points'' (called here ''projective points'' for clarity) of the projective plane as the lines passing through . A ''projective line'' in this plane consists of all projective points (which are lines) contained in a plane passing through . As the intersection of two planes passing through is a line passing through , the intersection of two distinct projective lines consists of a single projective point. The plane
defines a projective line which is called the ''line at infinity'' of . By identifying each point of with the corresponding projective point, one can thus say that the projective plane is the
disjoint union of and the (projective) line at infinity.
As an
affine space with a distinguished point may be identified with its associated
vector space (see ), the preceding construction is generally done by starting from a vector space and is called
projectivization. Also, the construction can be done by starting with a vector space of any positive dimension.
So, a projective space of dimension can be defined as the set of
vector line
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set whose elements, often called ''vectors'', may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called ''scalars''. Scalars are often real numbers, but can ...
s (vector subspaces of dimension one) in a vector space of dimension . A projective space can also be defined as the elements of any set that is in natural correspondence with this set of vector lines.
This set can be the set of
equivalence classes under the equivalence relation between vectors defined by "one vector is the product of the other by a nonzero scalar". In other words, this amounts to defining a projective space as the set of vector lines in which the zero vector has been removed.
A third equivalent definition is to define a projective space of dimension as the set of pairs of
antipodal points in a sphere of dimension (in a space of dimension ).
Definition
Given a
vector space over a
field , the ''projective space'' is the set of
equivalence classes of under the equivalence relation defined by if there is a nonzero element of such that . If is a
topological vector space, the quotient space is a
topological space, endowed with the
quotient topology of the
subspace topology
In topology and related areas of mathematics, a subspace of a topological space ''X'' is a subset ''S'' of ''X'' which is equipped with a topology induced from that of ''X'' called the subspace topology (or the relative topology, or the induced t ...
of . This is the case when is the field
of the
real number
In mathematics, a real number is a number that can be used to measurement, measure a ''continuous'' one-dimensional quantity such as a distance, time, duration or temperature. Here, ''continuous'' means that values can have arbitrarily small var ...
s or the field
of the
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. If is finite dimensional, the ''dimension'' of is the dimension of minus one.
In the common case where , the projective space is denoted (as well as or , although this notation may be confused with exponentiation). The space is often called ''the'' projective space of dimension over , or ''the projective -space'', since all projective spaces of dimension are
isomorphic to it (because every vector space of dimension is isomorphic to ).
The elements of a projective space are commonly called ''
points
Point or points may refer to:
Places
* Point, Lewis, a peninsula in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
* Point, Texas, a city in Rains County, Texas, United States
* Point, the NE tip and a ferry terminal of Lismore, Inner Hebrides, Scotland
* Point ...
''. If a
basis of has been chosen, and, in particular if , the
projective coordinates of a point ''P'' are the coordinates on the basis of any element of the corresponding equivalence class. These coordinates are commonly denoted , the colons and the brackets being used for distinguishing from usual coordinates, and emphasizing that this is an equivalence class, which is defined
up to Two Mathematical object, mathematical objects ''a'' and ''b'' are called equal up to an equivalence relation ''R''
* if ''a'' and ''b'' are related by ''R'', that is,
* if ''aRb'' holds, that is,
* if the equivalence classes of ''a'' and ''b'' wi ...
the multiplication by a non zero constant. That is, if are projective coordinates of a point, then are also projective coordinates of the same point, for any nonzero in . Also, the above definition implies that are projective coordinates of a point if and only if at least one of the coordinates is nonzero.
If is the field of real or complex numbers, a projective space is called a
real projective space or a
complex projective space, respectively. If is one or two, a projective space of dimension is called a
projective line or a
projective plane, respectively. The complex projective line is also called the
Riemann sphere.
All these definitions extend naturally to the case where is a
division ring; see, for example,
Quaternionic projective space In mathematics, quaternionic projective space is an extension of the ideas of real projective space and complex projective space, to the case where coordinates lie in the ring of quaternions \mathbb. Quaternionic projective space of dimension ''n'' ...
. The notation is sometimes used for . If is a
finite field with elements, is often denoted (see
PG(3,2)).
Related concepts
Subspace
Let be a projective space, where is a vector space over a field , and
be the ''canonical map'' that maps a nonzero vector to its equivalence class, which is the
vector line
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set whose elements, often called ''vectors'', may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called ''scalars''. Scalars are often real numbers, but can ...
containing with the zero vector removed.
Every
linear subspace
In mathematics, and more specifically in linear algebra, a linear subspace, also known as a vector subspaceThe term ''linear subspace'' is sometimes used for referring to flats and affine subspaces. In the case of vector spaces over the reals, ...
of is a union of lines. It follows that is a projective space, which can be identified with .
A ''projective subspace'' is thus a projective space that is obtained by restricting to a linear subspace the equivalence relation that defines .
If and are two different points of , the vectors and are
linearly independent
In the theory of vector spaces, a set of vectors is said to be if there is a nontrivial linear combination of the vectors that equals the zero vector. If no such linear combination exists, then the vectors are said to be . These concepts ...
. It follows that:
* ''There is exactly one projective line that passes through two different points of'' , and
* ''A subset of'' ''is a projective subspace if and only if, given any two different points, it contains the whole projective line passing through these points.''
In
synthetic geometry, where projective lines are primitive objects, the first property is an axiom, and the second one is the definition of a projective subspace.
Span
Every
intersection of projective subspaces is a projective subspace. It follows that for every subset of a projective space, there is a smallest projective subspace containing , the intersection of all projective subspaces containing . This projective subspace is called the ''projective span'' of , and is a spanning set for it.
A set of points is ''projectively independent'' if its span is not the span of any proper subset of . If is a spanning set of a projective space , then there is a subset of that spans and is projectively independent (this results from the similar theorem for vector spaces). If the dimension of is , such an independent spanning set has elements.
Contrarily to the cases of
vector spaces and
affine spaces, an independent spanning set does not suffice for defining coordinates. One needs one more point, see next section.
Frame
A ''projective frame'' is an ordered set of points in a projective space that allows defining coordinates. More precisely, in a -dimensional projective space, a projective frame is a tuple of points such that any of them are independent—that is are not contained in a hyperplane.
If is a -dimensional vector space, and is the canonical projection from to , then
is a projective frame if and only if
is a basis of , and the coefficients of
on this basis are all nonzero. By rescaling the first vectors, any frame can be rewritten as
such that
this representation is unique up to the multiplication of all
with a common nonzero factor.
The ''projective coordinates'' or ''homogeneous coordinates'' of a point on a frame
with
are the coordinates of on the basis
They are again only defined up to scaling with a common nonzero factor.
The ''canonical frame'' of the projective space consists of images by of the elements of the canonical basis of (the
tuples with only one nonzero entry, equal to 1), and the image by of their sum.
Projective transformation
Topology
A projective space is a
topological space, as endowed with the
quotient topology of the topology of a finite dimensional real vector space.
Let be the
unit sphere in a normed vector space , and consider the function
that maps a point of to the vector line passing through it. This function is continuous and surjective. The inverse image of every point of consist of two
antipodal point
In mathematics, antipodal points of a sphere are those diametrically opposite to each other (the specific qualities of such a definition are that a line drawn from the one to the other passes through the center of the sphere so forms a true ...
s. As spheres are
compact space
In mathematics, specifically general topology, compactness is a property that seeks to generalize the notion of a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space by making precise the idea of a space having no "punctures" or "missing endpoints", i ...
s, it follows that:
For every point of , the restriction of to a neighborhood of is a
homeomorphism onto its image, provided that the neighborhood is small enough for not containing any pair of antipodal points. This shows that a projective space is a manifold. A simple
atlas
An atlas is a collection of maps; it is typically a bundle of maps of Earth or of a region of Earth.
Atlases have traditionally been bound into book form, but today many atlases are in multimedia formats. In addition to presenting geograp ...
can be provided, as follows.
As soon as a basis has been chosen for , any vector can be identified with its coordinates on the basis, and any point of may be identified with its
homogeneous coordinates. For , the set
is an open subset of , and
since every point of has at least one nonzero coordinate.
To each is associated a
chart, which is the
homeomorphisms
such that
where hats means that the corresponding term is missing.

These charts form an
atlas
An atlas is a collection of maps; it is typically a bundle of maps of Earth or of a region of Earth.
Atlases have traditionally been bound into book form, but today many atlases are in multimedia formats. In addition to presenting geograp ...
, and, as the
transition maps are
analytic function
In mathematics, an analytic function is a function that is locally given by a convergent power series. There exist both real analytic functions and complex analytic functions. Functions of each type are infinitely differentiable, but complex ...
s, it results that projective spaces are
analytic manifolds.
For example, in the case of , that is of a projective line, there are only two , which can each be identified to a copy of the
real line
In elementary mathematics, a number line is a picture of a graduated straight line (geometry), line that serves as visual representation of the real numbers. Every point of a number line is assumed to correspond to a real number, and every real ...
. In both lines, the intersection of the two charts is the set of nonzero real numbers, and the transition map is
in both directions. The image represents the projective line as a circle where antipodal points are identified, and shows the two homeomorphisms of a real line to the projective line; as antipodal points are identified, the image of each line is represented as an open half circle, which can be identified with the projective line with a single point removed.
CW complex structure
Real projective spaces have a simple
CW complex structure, as can be obtained from by attaching an -cell with the quotient projection as the attaching map.
Algebraic geometry
Originally,
algebraic geometry was the study of common zeros of sets of
multivariate polynomials. These common zeros, called
algebraic varieties
Algebraic varieties are the central objects of study in algebraic geometry, a sub-field of mathematics. Classically, an algebraic variety is defined as the set of solutions of a system of polynomial equations over the real or complex number
...
belong to an
affine space. It appeared soon, that in the case of real coefficients, one must consider all the complex zeros for having accurate results. For example, the
fundamental theorem of algebra asserts that a univariate
square-free polynomial of degree has exactly complex roots. In the multivariate case, the consideration of complex zeros is also needed, but not sufficient: one must also consider ''zeros at infinity''. For example,
Bézout's theorem asserts that the intersection of two plane
algebraic curves of respective degrees and consists of exactly points if one consider complex points in the projective plane, and if one counts the points with their multiplicity. Another example is the
genus–degree formula that allows computing the genus of a plane
algebraic curve from its
singularities in the ''complex projective plane''.
So a
projective variety
In algebraic geometry, a projective variety over an algebraically closed field ''k'' is a subset of some projective ''n''-space \mathbb^n over ''k'' that is the zero-locus of some finite family of homogeneous polynomials of ''n'' + 1 variables w ...
is the set of points in a projective space, whose
homogeneous coordinates are common zeros of a set of
homogeneous polynomials.
Any affine variety can be ''completed'', in a unique way, into a projective variety by adding its
points at infinity, which consists of
homogenizing
Homogeneity and heterogeneity are concepts often used in the sciences and statistics relating to the uniformity of a substance or organism. A material or image that is homogeneous is uniform in composition or character (i.e. color, shape, si ...
the defining polynomials, and removing the components that are contained in the hyperplane at infinity, by
saturating with respect to the homogenizing variable.
An important property of projective spaces and projective varieties is that the image of a projective variety under a
morphism of algebraic varieties is closed for
Zariski topology (that is, it is an
algebraic set). This is a generalization to every ground field of the compactness of the real and complex projective space.
A projective space is itself a projective variety, being the set of zeros of the zero polynomial.
Scheme theory
Scheme theory, introduced by
Alexander Grothendieck during the second half of 20th century, allows defining a generalization of algebraic varieties, called
schemes, by gluing together smaller pieces called
affine schemes
In commutative algebra, the prime spectrum (or simply the spectrum) of a ring ''R'' is the set of all prime ideals of ''R'', and is usually denoted by \operatorname; in algebraic geometry it is simultaneously a topological space equipped with th ...
, similarly as
manifold
In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a n ...
s can be built by gluing together open sets of
The
Proj construction is the construction of the scheme of a projective space, and, more generally of any projective variety, by gluing together affine schemes. In the case of projective spaces, one can take for these affine schemes the affine schemes associated to the charts (affine spaces) of the above description of a projective space as a manifold.
Synthetic geometry
In
synthetic geometry, a projective space ''S'' can be defined axiomatically as a set ''P'' (the set of points), together with a set ''L'' of subsets of ''P'' (the set of lines), satisfying these axioms:
* Each two distinct points ''p'' and ''q'' are in exactly one line.
*
Veblen's axiom: If ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are distinct points and the lines through ''ab'' and ''cd'' meet, then so do the lines through ''ac'' and ''bd''.
* Any line has at least 3 points on it.
The last axiom eliminates reducible cases that can be written as a disjoint union of projective spaces together with 2-point lines joining any two points in distinct projective spaces. More abstractly, it can be defined as an
incidence structure consisting of a set ''P'' of points, a set ''L'' of lines, and an
incidence relation ''I'' that states which points lie on which lines.
The structures defined by these axioms are more general than those obtained from the vector space construction given above. If the (projective) dimension is at least three then, by the
Veblen–Young theorem In mathematics, the Veblen–Young theorem, proved by , states that a projective space of dimension at least 3 can be constructed as the projective space associated to a vector space over a division ring.
Non-Desarguesian planes give examples of 2 ...
, there is no difference. However, for dimension two, there are examples that satisfy these axioms that can not be constructed from vector spaces (or even modules over division rings). These examples do not satisfy the
Theorem of Desargues and are known as
Non-Desarguesian planes. In dimension one, any set with at least three elements satisfies the axioms, so it is usual to assume additional structure for projective lines defined axiomatically.
It is possible to avoid the troublesome cases in low dimensions by adding or modifying axioms that define a projective space. gives such an extension due to Bachmann. To ensure that the dimension is at least two, replace the three point per line axiom above by;
* There exist four points, no three of which are collinear.
To avoid the non-Desarguesian planes, include
Pappus's theorem as an axiom;
* If the six vertices of a hexagon lie alternately on two lines, the three points of intersection of pairs of opposite sides are collinear.
And, to ensure that the vector space is defined over a field that does not have even
characteristic include ''Fano's axiom'';
* The three diagonal points of a
complete quadrangle are never collinear.
A subspace of the projective space is a subset ''X'', such that any line containing two points of ''X'' is a subset of ''X'' (that is, completely contained in ''X''). The full space and the empty space are always subspaces.
The geometric dimension of the space is said to be ''n'' if that is the largest number for which there is a strictly ascending chain of subspaces of this form:
A subspace
in such a chain is said to have (geometric) dimension
. Subspaces of dimension 0 are called ''points'', those of dimension 1 are called ''lines'' and so on. If the full space has dimension
then any subspace of dimension
is called a
hyperplane.
Projective spaces admit an equivalent formulation in terms of lattice (order), lattice theory. There is a bijective correspondence between projective spaces and geomodular lattices, namely, subdirectly irreducible, Compact element, compactly generated, complemented lattice, complemented, modular lattices.
Classification
*Dimension 0 (no lines): The space is a single point.
*Dimension 1 (exactly one line): All points lie on the unique line.
*Dimension 2: There are at least 2 lines, and any two lines meet. A projective space for is equivalent to a
projective plane. These are much harder to classify, as not all of them are isomorphic with a . The Desarguesian planes (those that are isomorphic with a satisfy Desargues's theorem and are projective planes over division rings, but there are many non-Desarguesian planes.
*Dimension at least 3: Two non-intersecting lines exist. proved the
Veblen–Young theorem In mathematics, the Veblen–Young theorem, proved by , states that a projective space of dimension at least 3 can be constructed as the projective space associated to a vector space over a division ring.
Non-Desarguesian planes give examples of 2 ...
, to the effect that every projective space of dimension is isomorphic with a , the ''n''-dimensional projective space over some
division ring ''K''.
Finite projective spaces and planes
A ''finite projective space'' is a projective space where ''P'' is a finite set of points. In any finite projective space, each line contains the same number of points and the ''order'' of the space is defined as one less than this common number. For finite projective spaces of dimension at least three, Wedderburn's little theorem, Wedderburn's theorem implies that the division ring over which the projective space is defined must be a
finite field, GF(''q''), whose order (that is, number of elements) is ''q'' (a prime power). A finite projective space defined over such a finite field has points on a line, so the two concepts of order coincide. Notationally, is usually written as .
All finite fields of the same order are isomorphic, so, up to isomorphism, there is only one finite projective space for each dimension greater than or equal to three, over a given finite field. However, in dimension two there are non-Desarguesian planes. Up to isomorphism there are
finite projective planes of orders 2, 3, 4, ..., 10, respectively. The numbers beyond this are very difficult to calculate and are not determined except for some zero values due to the Bruck–Ryser–Chowla theorem, Bruck–Ryser theorem.
The smallest projective plane is the Fano plane, with 7 points and 7 lines. The smallest 3-dimensional projective spaces is
PG(3,2), with 15 points, 35 lines and 15 planes.
Morphisms
Injective linear maps between two vector spaces ''V'' and ''W'' over the same field ''k'' induce mappings of the corresponding projective spaces via:
where ''v'' is a non-zero element of ''V'' and [...] denotes the equivalence classes of a vector under the defining identification of the respective projective spaces. Since members of the equivalence class differ by a scalar factor, and linear maps preserve scalar factors, this induced map is well-defined. (If ''T'' is not injective, it has a null space larger than ; in this case the meaning of the class of ''T''(''v'') is problematic if ''v'' is non-zero and in the null space. In this case one obtains a so-called rational map, see also birational geometry).
Two linear maps ''S'' and ''T'' in induce the same map between P(''V'') and P(''W'') if and only if they differ by a scalar multiple, that is if for some . Thus if one identifies the scalar multiples of the identity function, identity map with the underlying field ''K'', the set of ''K''-linear morphisms from P(''V'') to P(''W'') is simply .
The automorphisms can be described more concretely. (We deal only with automorphisms preserving the base field ''K''). Using the notion of ample line bundle, sheaves generated by global sections, it can be shown that any algebraic (not necessarily linear) automorphism must be linear, i.e., coming from a (linear) automorphism of the vector space ''V''. The latter form the group (mathematics), group general linear group, GL(''V''). By identifying maps that differ by a scalar, one concludes that
the quotient group of GL(''V'') modulo the matrices that are scalar multiples of the identity. (These matrices form the center of a group, center of Aut(''V'').) The groups PGL are called projective linear groups. The automorphisms of the complex projective line P
1(C) are called Möbius transformations.
Dual projective space
When the construction above is applied to the dual space ''V''
∗ rather than ''V'', one obtains the dual projective space, which can be canonically identified with the space of hyperplanes through the origin of ''V''. That is, if ''V'' is ''n'' dimensional, then P(''V''
∗) is the Grassmannian of planes in ''V''.
In algebraic geometry, this construction allows for greater flexibility in the construction of projective bundles. One would like to be able to associate a projective space to ''every'' quasi-coherent sheaf ''E'' over a scheme ''Y'', not just the locally free ones. See Éléments de géométrie algébrique, EGA
II, Chap. II, par. 4 for more details.
Generalizations
;dimension: The projective space, being the "space" of all one-dimensional linear subspaces of a given vector space ''V'' is generalized to Grassmannian manifold, which is parametrizing higher-dimensional subspaces (of some fixed dimension) of ''V''.
;sequence of subspaces: More generally flag manifold is the space of flags, i.e., chains of linear subspaces of ''V''.
;other subvarieties: Even more generally, moduli spaces parametrize objects such as elliptic curves of a given kind.
;other rings: Generalizing to associative ring (mathematics), rings (rather than only fields) yields, for example, the projective line over a ring.
;patching: Patching projective spaces together yields projective space bundles.
Severi–Brauer variety, Severi–Brauer varieties are
algebraic varieties
Algebraic varieties are the central objects of study in algebraic geometry, a sub-field of mathematics. Classically, an algebraic variety is defined as the set of solutions of a system of polynomial equations over the real or complex number
...
over a field ''k'', which become isomorphic to projective spaces after an extension of the base field ''k''.
Another generalization of projective spaces are weighted projective spaces; these are themselves special cases of toric variety, toric varieties.
See also
Generalizations
*Grassmannian manifold
*Projective line over a ring
*Space (mathematics)
Projective geometry
*projective transformation
*projective representation
Related
* Geometric algebra
Notes
Citations
References
*
*
*
*
*
*
* Greenberg, M.J.; ''Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometries'', 2nd ed. Freeman (1980).
* , esp. chapters I.2, I.7, II.5, and II.7
* Hilbert, D. and Cohn-Vossen, S.;
Geometry and the imagination', 2nd ed. Chelsea (1999).
*
* (Reprint of 1910 edition)
External links
*
*
Projective Planes of Small Order
{{Dimension topics, state=uncollapsed
Projective geometry