Divisible Semiplanes, Arcs, and Relative Difference Sets
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Mathematical Society in Canadian Journal of Mathematics
- Vol. 39 (4) , 1001-1024
- https://doi.org/10.4153/cjm-1987-051-1
Abstract
In this paper we shall be concerned with arcs of divisible semiplanes. With one exception, all known divisible semiplanes D (also called “elliptic” semiplanes) arise by omitting the empty set or a Baer subset from a projective plane Π, i.e., D = Π\S, where S is one of the following: (i) S is the empty set. (ii) S consists of a line L with all its points and a point p with all the lines through it. (iii) S is a Baer subplane of Π. We will introduce a definition of “arc” in divisible semiplanes; in the examples just mentioned, arcs of D will be arcs of Π that interact in a prescribed manner with the Baer subset S omitted. The precise definition (to be given in Section 2) is chosen in such a way that divisible semiplanes admitting an abelian Singer group (i.e., a group acting regularly on both points and lines) and then a relative difference set D will always contain a large collection of arcs related to D (to be precise, —D and all its translates will be arcs).Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Finite GeometriesPublished by Springer Nature ,1968