In
mathematics, the term '''integral geometry''' is used in two ways, which, although related, imply different views of the content of the subject.
Cases
The more traditional usage is that of
Santalo and
Blaschke. It follows from the
classic theorem of Crofton expressing the
length of a plane
curve as an
expectation of the number of intersections with a
random line.
Here the word 'random' must be interpreted as subject to correct symmetry considerations.
There is a sample space of lines, one on which the
affine group of the plane acts. A
probability measure is sought on this space, invariant under the symmetry group. If, as in this case, we can find a unique such invariant measure, that solves the problem of formulating accurately what 'random line' means; and expectations become integrals with respect to that measure. (Note for example that the phrase 'random chord of a circle' can be used to construct some
paradoxes.)
We can therefore say that ''integral geometry in the sense of Santalo'', is the application of
probability theory (as axiomatized by
Kolmogorov) in the context of the
Erlangen programme of Klein. The content of the theory is effectively that of invariant (smooth) measures on (preferably
compact)
homogeneous spaces of
Lie groups; and the evaluation of integrals of
differential forms arising.
A very celebrated case is the problem of
Buffon's needle: drop a needle on a floor made of planks and calculate the probability the needle lies across a crack. Generalising, this theory is applied to various
stochastic processes concerned with geometric and incidence questions.
One of the most interesting theorems in this form of integral geometry is
Hadwiger's theorem.
The more recent meaning of 'integral geometry' is that of
Israel Gelfand. It deals more specifically with integral transforms, modelled on the
Radon transform. Here the underlying geometrical incidence relation (points lying on lines, in Crofton's case) is seen in a freer light, as the site for an integral transform composed as ''pullback onto the incidence graph'' and then ''push forward''.