HYPERBOLIC SPACE

A perspective projection of a dodecahedral tessellation in ''H3''.
Four dodecahedra meet at each edge, and eight meet at each vertex, just like a cubic tessellation in ''E3''

In mathematics, 'hyperbolic ''n''-space', denoted ''H''''n'', is the maximally symmetric, simply connected, ''n''-dimensional Riemannian manifold with constant sectional curvature −1. Hyperbolic space is the principal example of a space exhibiting hyperbolic geometry. It can be thought of as the negative-curvature analogue of the ''n''-sphere.
Although hyperbolic space ''H''''n'' is diffeomorphic to 'R'''n'' its negative-curvature metric gives it very different geometric properties.
Hyperbolic 2-space, ''H''2, is also called the hyperbolic plane.

Contents
Models of hyperbolic space
The hyperboloid model
The Klein model
The Poincaré models
Hyperbolic manifolds
See also
References

Models of hyperbolic space


Hyperbolic space, developed independently by Lobachevsky and Bolyai, is a geometrical space analogous to Euclidean space, but such that Euclid's parallel postulate is no longer assumed to hold. Instead, the parallel postulate is replaced by the following alternative (in two-dimensions):

★ Given any line ''L'' and point ''P'' not on ''L'', there are at least two distinct lines passing through ''P'' which do not intersect ''L''.[1]
Hyperbolic spaces are constructed in order to model such a modification of Euclidean geometry. In particular, the existence of model spaces implies that the parallel postulate is logically independent of the other axioms of Euclidean geometry.
There are several important models of hyperbolic space: the 'Klein model', the 'hyperboloid model', and the 'Poincaré model'. These all model the same geometry in the sense that any two of them can be related by a transformation which preserves all the geometrical properties of the space. They are isometric.
The hyperboloid model

Main articles: Hyperboloid model

The first model realizes hyperbolic space as a hyperboloid in 'R'n+1 = {(''x''0,...,''x''n)|''x''i∈'R', i=0,1,...,n}. The hyperboloid is the locus ''H''n of points whose coordinates satisfy
:x_0^2-x_1^2-ldots-x_n^2=1,quad x_0>0.
In this model a "line" (or geodesic) is the curve cut out by intersecting ''H''n with a plane through the origin in 'R'n+1.
The hyperboloid model is closely related to the geometry of Minkowski space. The quadratic form
:Q(x) = x_0^2 - x_1^2 - x_2^2 - cdots - x_n^2
which defines the hyperboloid polarizes to give the bilinear form ''B'' defined by
:B(x,y) = (Q(x+y)-Q(x)-Q(y))/2=x_0y_0 - x_1y_1 - cdots - x_ny_n.
The space 'R'n+1, equipped with the bilinear form ''B'' is an (''n''+1)-dimensional Minkowski space 'R'n,1.
From this perspective, one can associate a notion of ''distance'' to the hyperboloid model, by defining the distance between two points ''x'' and ''y'' on ''H'' to be
:d(x, y) = operatorname{arccosh}, B(x,y).
This function satisfies the axioms of a metric space.[2] Moreover, it is preserved by the action of the Lorentz group on 'R'n,1. Hence the Lorentz group acts as a transformation group of isometries on ''H''n.
The Klein model

Main articles: Klein model

An alternative model of hyperbolic geometry is on a certain domain in projective space. The Minkowski quadratic form ''Q'' defines a subset ''U''n ⊂ 'RP'n given as the locus of points for which ''Q''(''x'') > 0 in the homogeneous coordinates ''x''. The domain ''U''n is the 'Klein model' of hyperbolic space.
The lines of this model are the open line segments of the ambient projective space which lie in ''U''n. The distance between two points ''x'' and ''y'' in ''U''n is defined by
:d(x, y) = operatorname{arccosh}left( rac{B(x,y)}{sqrt{Q(x)Q(y)}}
ight).
Note that this is well-defined on projective space, since the ratio under the inverse hyperbolic cosine is homogeneous of degree 0.
This model is related to the hyperboloid model as follows. Each point ''x'' ∈ ''U''n corresponds to a line ''L''x through the origin in 'R'n+1, by the definition of projective space. This line intersects the hyperboloid ''H''n in a unique point. Conversely, through any point on ''H''n, there passes a unique line through the origin (which is a point in the projective space). This correspondence defines a bijection between ''U''n and ''H''n. It is an isometry since evaluating ''d''(''x'',''y'') along ''Q''(''x'') = ''Q''(''y'') = 1 reproduces the definition of the distance given for the hyperboloid model.
The Poincaré models

: ''Main articles: Poincaré disc model, Poincaré half-plane model''
Another closely related pair of models of hyperbolic geometry are the Poincaré ball and Poincaré half-space models. The ball model comes from a stereographic projection of the hyperboloid in 'R'n+1 onto the plane {''x''0 = 0}. In detail, let ''S'' be the point in 'R'n,1 with coordinates (-1,0,0,...,0): the ''South pole'' for the stereographic projection. For each point ''P'' on the hyperboloid ''H''n, let ''P''
be the unique point of intersection of the line ''SP'' with the plane {''x''0 = 0}. This establishes a bijective mapping of ''H''n into the unit ball
: B^n = {(x_1,ldots,x_n) | x_1^2+ldots+x_n^2 < 1}
in the plane {''x''0 = 0}.
The geodesics in this model are semicircles which are perpendicular to the boundary sphere of ''B''n. Isometries of the ball are generated by spherical inversion in hyperspheres perpendicular to the boundary.
The half-space model results from applying an inversion in a point of the boundary of ''B''n. This sends circles to circles and lines, and is moreover a conformal transformation. Consequently the geodesics of the half-space model are lines and circles perpendicular to the boundary hyperplane.

Hyperbolic manifolds


Every complete, simply-connected manifold of constant negative curvature −1 is isometric to the real hyperbolic space ''H''''n''. As a result, the universal cover of any closed manifold ''M'' of constant negative curvature −1, which is to say, a hyperbolic manifold, is ''H''''n''. Thus, every such ''M'' can be written as ''H''''n''/Γ where Γ is a torsion-free discrete group of isometries on ''H''''n''. That is, Γ is a lattice in SO+(''n'',1).

See also



Mostow rigidity theorem

Hyperbolic manifold

Hyperbolic 3-manifold

Hyperbolic geometry

References



★ Ratcliffe, John G., ''Foundations of hyperbolic manifolds'', New York, Berlin. Springer-Verlag, 1994.

★ Reynolds, William F. (1993) "Hyperbolic Geometry on a Hyperboloid", American Mathematical Monthly 100:442-455.

★ Wolf, Joseph A. ''Spaces of constant curvature'', 1967. See page 67.

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