Intersection theorem

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In projective geometry, an intersection theorem or incidence theorem is a statement concerning an incidence structure – consisting of points, lines, and possibly higher-dimensional objects and their incidences – together with a pair of objects Template:Math and Template:Math (for instance, a point and a line). The "theorem" states that, whenever a set of objects satisfies the incidences (i.e. can be identified with the objects of the incidence structure in such a way that incidence is preserved), then the objects Template:Math and Template:Math must also be incident. An intersection theorem is not necessarily true in all projective geometries; it is a property that some geometries satisfy but others don't.

For example, Desargues' theorem can be stated using the following incidence structure:

  • Points: {A,B,C,a,b,c,P,Q,R,O}
  • Lines: {AB,AC,BC,ab,ac,bc,Aa,Bb,Cc,PQ}
  • Incidences (in addition to obvious ones such as (A,AB)): {(O,Aa),(O,Bb),(O,Cc),(P,BC),(P,bc),(Q,AC),(Q,ac),(R,AB),(R,ab)}

The implication is then (R,PQ)—that point Template:Math is incident with line Template:Math.

Famous examples

Desargues' theorem holds in a projective plane Template:Math if and only if Template:Math is the projective plane over some division ring (skewfield) Template:MathP=2D. The projective plane is then called desarguesian. A theorem of Amitsur and Bergman states that, in the context of desarguesian projective planes, for every intersection theorem there is a rational identity such that the plane Template:Math satisfies the intersection theorem if and only if the division ring Template:Math satisfies the rational identity.

References