The cyclic parallelism of PG(3,5) (Q1266377): Difference between revisions
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Property / DOI: 10.1006/eujc.1997.0204 / rank | |||
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Property / author: Alan R. Prince / rank | |||
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Property / DOI: 10.1006/EUJC.1997.0204 / rank | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:02, 10 December 2024
scientific article
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English | The cyclic parallelism of PG(3,5) |
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The cyclic parallelism of PG(3,5) (English)
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18 February 1999
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A spread of the projective space \(P = \text{PG}(3,q)\) is a set of \(q^2+1\) pairwise non-intersecting lines of \(P\). A parallelism of \(P\) is a family of \(q^2+q+1\) spreads of \(P\) which partition the set of lines of \(P\). A parallelism is called cyclic, if there is a collineation of \(P\) of order \(q^2+q+1\) that permutes its spreads in a cyclic way. A parallelism is called regular, if any of its spreads is regular. Up to now, no example of a regular parallelism of \(P\) was known. In the paper under review the author determines (by the use of a computer) all cyclic parallelisms of \(\text{PG} (3,5)\). Up to projective equivalence, there are 45 cyclic parallelisms of \(\text{PG} (3,5)\), two of them being regular.
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projective space
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cyclic parallelism
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PG(3,5)
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