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  2. Fano plane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fano_plane

    The Fano plane is an example of a finite incidence structure, so many of its properties can be established using combinatorial techniques and other tools used in the study of incidence geometries. Since it is a projective space, algebraic techniques can also be effective tools in its study.

  3. Steiner system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steiner_system

    The Fano plane is a Steiner triple system S(2,3,7). The blocks are the 7 lines, each containing 3 points. Every pair of points belongs to a unique line. In combinatorial mathematics, a Steiner system (named after Jakob Steiner) is a type of block design, specifically a t-design with λ = 1 and t = 2 or (recently) t ≥ 2.

  4. Projective geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_geometry

    The Fano plane is the projective plane with the fewest points and lines. The smallest 2-dimensional projective geometry (that with the fewest points) is the Fano plane, which has 3 points on every line, with 7 points and 7 lines in all, having the following collinearities:

  5. Projective plane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_plane

    The Fano plane, discussed below, is denoted by PG(2, 2). The third example above is the projective plane PG(2, 3). The Fano plane. Points are shown as dots; lines are shown as lines or circles. The Fano plane is the projective plane arising from the field of two elements. It is the smallest projective plane, with only seven points and seven lines.

  6. Incidence geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incidence_geometry

    The Fano plane cannot be represented in the Euclidean plane using only points and straight line segments (i.e., it is not realizable). This is a consequence of the Sylvester–Gallai theorem , according to which every realizable incidence geometry must include an ordinary line , a line containing only two points.

  7. Incidence structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incidence_structure

    The Fano plane (example 1 above) is not realizable since it needs at least one curve. The Möbius–Kantor configuration (example 4 above) is not realizable in the Euclidean plane, but it is realizable in the complex plane. [7] On the other hand, examples 2 and 5 above are realizable and the incidence figures given there demonstrate this.

  8. Finite geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_geometry

    The Fano plane. This particular projective plane is sometimes called the Fano plane. If any of the lines is removed from the plane, along with the points on that line, the resulting geometry is the affine plane of order 2. The Fano plane is called the projective plane of order 2 because it is unique (up to

  9. Galois geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galois_geometry

    The Fano plane, the projective plane over the field with two elements, is one of the simplest objects in Galois geometry.. Galois geometry (named after the 19th-century French mathematician Évariste Galois) is the branch of finite geometry that is concerned with algebraic and analytic geometry over a finite field (or Galois field). [1]