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  2. Collinearity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collinearity

    In geometry, collinearity of a set of points is the property of their lying on a single line. [1] A set of points with this property is said to be collinear (sometimes spelled as colinear [2]). In greater generality, the term has been used for aligned objects, that is, things being "in a line" or "in a row".

  3. Collineation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collineation

    Möbius' designation can be expressed by saying, collinear points are mapped by a permutation to collinear points, or in plain speech, straight lines stay straight. Contemporary mathematicians view geometry as an incidence structure with an automorphism group consisting of mappings of the underlying space that preserve incidence. Such a mapping ...

  4. Monge's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monge's_theorem

    In geometry, Monge's theorem, named after Gaspard Monge, states that for any three circles in a plane, none of which is completely inside one of the others, the intersection points of each of the three pairs of external tangent lines are collinear.

  5. Collinearity equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collinearity_equation

    The most obvious use of these equations is for images recorded by a camera. In this case the equation describes transformations from object space (X, Y, Z) to image coordinates (x, y). It forms the basis for the equations used in bundle adjustment. They indicate that the image point (on the sensor plate of the camera), the observed point (on ...

  6. Partial geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partial_geometry

    A semipartial geometry is a partial geometry if and only if ⁠ = (+) ⁠. It can be easily shown that the collinearity graph of such a geometry is strongly regular with parameters ⁠ ( 1 + s ( t + 1 ) + s ( t + 1 ) t ( s − α + 1 ) / μ , s ( t + 1 ) , s − 1 + t ( α − 1 ) , μ ) {\displaystyle (1+s(t+1)+s(t+1)t(s-\alpha +1)/\mu ,s(t+1 ...

  7. Cross-ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-ratio

    Being on a circle means the four points are the image of four real points under a Möbius transformation, and hence the cross ratio is a real number. The Poincaré half-plane model and Poincaré disk model are two models of hyperbolic geometry in the complex projective line. These models are instances of Cayley–Klein metrics.

  8. General position - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_position

    Thus, in Euclidean geometry three non-collinear points determine a circle (as the circumcircle of the triangle they define), but four points in general do not (they do so only for cyclic quadrilaterals), so the notion of "general position with respect to circles", namely "no four points lie on a circle" makes sense. In projective geometry, by ...

  9. Euclidean planes in three-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_planes_in_three...

    In Euclidean geometry, a plane is a flat two-dimensional surface that extends indefinitely. Euclidean planes often arise as subspaces of three-dimensional space. A prototypical example is one of a room's walls, infinitely extended and assumed infinitesimal thin.