Saturday, June 21, 2025

June circles

After a break - return. Back to April 4, to the post "Lie Sphere Geometry Part 3: oriented circles". We will take off from there. We like circles. As a young boy I was crazy with hoop rolling.


Much like on the picture above I was running with the bicycle rim hoop, as fast as I could,  along the streets of my town, attempting, not always successfully, not to run into pedestrians. So, I do like circles. To have more fun we consider circles on the sphere S2:

S2 = {xR3 x2 = 1}                (1)

For every mS2, and for every r∈[0,π] the unoriented circle Sr(m)is defined as

Sr(m) = {xS2 x·m = cos r}.                (2)

We orient the circle by defining its normal unit vector:

n(x) = (m - cos(r) x)/sin(r).                (3)

As in Lie Sphere Geometry Part 3: oriented circles and Seneca, we find that (m,r) and (-m, r + π mod 2π) define the same oriented circle - which bothers me a little. We will get rid of this identification soon. While it is the fact of life that we can read only one side of a page at a time, the book pages are usually printed on both sides. The same, that is my crazy idea, is with our universe. It has two sides, and with sufficient knowledge and technology, we should be able to read what is on the other side. If you think this is inadmissible fantasy, you can always consider it as a pure mathematics, much like imaginary numbers. Do they "exist"? Does not matter. They are, at least sometimes,  useful.

The whole point of Lie Sphere Geometry is to represent every oriented circle as a point of some "space" of more dimensions. But, as physicists, we think of a circle dynamically. We think of it as an expanding or contracting "wave", like those created by a piece of rock when it falls on the surface of a lake. So, each nonpoint circle either was or will be just a point. It expands or contracts. How fast? Say, with the velocity of light. So the parameter r of the circle is related to "time". That we should keep in our minds. At least this is what I am keeping in my mind. So it should not be a great surprise if following this way we will rediscover some aspects of special relativity, with Lorentz transformations acting in the space of circles. Except that, since I have decided to play with circles rather than spheres, our "space-time" will have only  2+1 dimensions, instead of the usual 3+1. It will be easier to imagine graphically. That is why this summer we will play with circles rather than spheres. But let us proceed step by step.

We have introduced the Lie Sphere Geometry in Lie Sphere Geometry Part 5: Lie Quadric with the sentence:


"According to Sophus Lie the Universe is 6-dimensional 6 = 3 + 1 + 2."

But now, for the present purposes,  we reduce our ambitions to 5 = 2+1+2, and we adapt accordingly:

We take five-dimensional real vector space R5 with coordinates x0, x1, x2, x4, x5. There we introduce the indefinite scalar product

(x,y) = x0y0 + x1y1 + x2y2 - x4y4 - x4y5.                (4)

We denote by R3,2 the resulting inner-product space. We endow R3,2 with orientation and denote by e0,e1,e2,e4,e5 the corresponding orthonormal basis in R3,2. Thus 

(e0,e0)=(e1,e1,)=(e2,e2)=1, (e4,e4)=(e5,e5)= -1.                (5)

Now we go to projective space by introducing in R3,2 the equivalence relation

xy if and only if there exists  a real λ>0 such that yx.

The equivalence classes [x] form the projective space P(R3,2). It is a compact 4-dimensional manifold.

Definition. The Lie quadric Q+P(R3,2) is the smooth quadric hypersurface

Q+ = {[u]∈P(R3,2): (u,u) = 0}.                (6)

We notice that Q is well defined: if λ>0 then (u,u)=0 if and only if (λuu) = 0. The condition defining Q+ takes away one dimension from the four dimensions of P(R3,2). Thus Q+ is a three dimensional and compact.

Comparing to Part 5, you can think that we have just put there x3=0. We are simply freezing one space dimensions. We have also introduced Q+ instead of the standard Q right away.  i.e. we used λ>0  instead of λ≠0 in the definition of the equivalence relation .

The following Proposition from Part 6 remains essentially unchanged except that now spheres have been replaced by circles, and m is now a unit vector in R3:

Proposition 1. The following formula defines an explicit isomorphism between the space of oriented circles  and Q+:

(m,r) ⟼ [m+cos(r)e4+sin(r)e5],               (7)

0 ≤ r < 2π.                    (8)

So far so good, but if we want to relate our geometrical model to physics, and to special relativity in particular, we need to descend from thr sphere S2 to the plane R2. Special relativity assumes that space is flat. Which, on one hand, is good, because it simplifies the mathematics, but on the other hand it may be bad, because this assumption seems to be questionable on a very small and very large scales. Anyway we have all needed tools ready - we use the stereographic projection. Which takes us first to Part 9, where we have defined oriented spheres in R3. Now we descend to R2:

Definition 1. The oriented circle with center p in R2 and signed radius ρ, 0≠ρ∈R, is

Sρ(p) = {yR2: (y-p)2=ρ2}                (9)

with unit normal vector field

n'(y) = (p-y)/ρ.                (10)

We now use the inverse stereographic projection to map a circle in R2 to a circle in S2, and then use (7) to represent it as a point in Q+. We have already did it for spheres in Part 13. We adapt the corresponding Proposition from there:


Proposition 2. With p = p1e1 + p2e2  R2 , ρ ∈ R, and

q(p, ρ) = p2 − ρ2,                             (11)

the correspondence, denoted by τs between oriented circles Sρ(p) in R2 and points of Q+
is given by:

τs(p, ρ) = [ ½(1 − q(p, ρ)) e0 + p  + ρ e4 + ½(1 + q(p, ρ)) e5 ].                 (12)

We can now use the formula above for embedding the 2+1 dimensional Minkowski spacetime in Q+ by setting ρ=ct, where t is time, and c is the speed of light. Choosing units in which c=1, we simply set ρ=t, then q(p, t) = p2 − t2. Here p represents space coordinates of an event.

We will continue in the next post where we will decompose Q+ into a set theoretic sum of two copies of the Minkowski spacetime (spacetime and anti-spacetime)and "the conformal infinity". While the geometry of the Minkowski spacetime is well known, the geometry of the conformal infinity is largely either unknown or just neglected.


8 comments:

  1. Glad to see you back, rolling with the circles. :)

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  2. Thanks. I stumbled upon a contradiction and it took me a while to resolve it. Two different methods of generating vector fields of the translation group were giving two different results, and I could not find an error. That bothered me a lot. Finally I realized that I was taking an invalid shortcut in one of these methods. We will come to this in my future posts.

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  3. Here you are, Ark! Your long silence made me a little worried. Now everything is fine.

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  4. I am very impressed by your idea of two-sided Universe. The way you express the feeling of two-valuedness with the example of book page is fresh and challenging. The more so that I was thinking about it myself, not in mathematical, but rather in metaphysical terms.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Metaphysics is fine, but there are also exercises in the last post!

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    2. Oh, the exercises add a challenge to life, but these two are beyond my capabilities, I will comment on why in the next post.
      Continuing with the duality theme, haven't you seen Vadim Varlamov's new post with atoms of elements organized into two double pyramids? Worth a look https://dzen.ru/a/aEuE8d7WoVOHvQTF

      Delete
    3. I should make a correction to the above: not "double pyramids" but "DUAL pyramids". This is essential!

      Delete
  5. "to descend from thr sphere" -> the

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