André plane
In mathematics, André planes are a class of finite translation planes found by André.[1] The Desarguesian plane and the Hall planes are examples of André planes; the two-dimensional regular nearfield planes are also André planes.
Construction
Let be a finite field, and let be a degree extension field of . Let be the group of field automorphisms of over , and let be an arbitrary mapping from to such that . Finally, let be the norm function from to .
Define a quasifield with the same elements and addition as K, but with multiplication defined via , where denotes the normal field multiplication in . Using this quasifield to construct a plane yields an André plane.[2]
Properties
- André planes exist for all proper prime powers with prime and a positive integer greater than one.
- Non-Desarguesian André planes exist for all proper prime powers except for where is prime.
Small Examples
For planes of order 25 and below, classification of Andrè planes is a consequence of either theoretical calculations or computer searches which have determined all translation planes of a given order:
- The smallest non-Desarguesian André plane has order 9, and it is isomorphic to the Hall plane of that order.
- The translation planes of order 16 have all been classified, and again the only non-Desarguesian André plane is the Hall plane.[3]
- There are three non-Desarguesian André planes of order 25.[4] These are the Hall plane, the regular nearfield plane, and a third plane not constructible by other techniques.[5]
- There is a single non-Desarguesian André plane of order 27.[6]
Enumeration of Andrè planes specifically has been performed for other small orders:[7]
| Order | Number of
non-Desarguesian Andrè planes |
|---|---|
| 9 | 1 |
| 16 | 1 |
| 25 | 3 |
| 27 | 1 |
| 49 | 7 |
| 64 | 6 (four 2-d, two 3-d) |
| 81 | 14 (13 2-d, one 4-d) |
| 121 | 43 |
| 125 | 6 |