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  2. Isometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometry

    A path isometry or arcwise isometry is a map which preserves the lengths of curves; such a map is not necessarily an isometry in the distance preserving sense, and it need not necessarily be bijective, or even injective. [5] [6] This term is often abridged to simply isometry, so one should take care to determine from context which type is intended.

  3. Isometry group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometry_group

    A discrete isometry group is an isometry group such that for every point of the space the set of images of the point under the isometries is a discrete set. In pseudo-Euclidean space the metric is replaced with an isotropic quadratic form ; transformations preserving this form are sometimes called "isometries", and the collection of them is ...

  4. Point groups in two dimensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_groups_in_two_dimensions

    For a given isometry group, the conjugates of a translation in the group by the elements of the group generate a translation group (a lattice)—that is a subgroup of the isometry group that only depends on the translation we started with, and the point group associated with the isometry group. This is because the conjugate of the translation ...

  5. Point groups in three dimensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_groups_in_three...

    In geometry, a point group in three dimensions is an isometry group in three dimensions that leaves the origin fixed, or correspondingly, an isometry group of a sphere.It is a subgroup of the orthogonal group O(3), the group of all isometries that leave the origin fixed, or correspondingly, the group of orthogonal matrices.

  6. Fixed points of isometry groups in Euclidean space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_points_of_isometry...

    Space Only the trivial isometry group C 1 leaves the whole space fixed. Plane C s with respect to a plane leaves that plane fixed. Line Isometry groups leaving a line fixed are isometries which in every plane perpendicular to that line have common 2D point groups in two dimensions with respect to the point of intersection of the line and the planes.

  7. Point groups in four dimensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_groups_in_four...

    In geometry, a point group in four dimensions is an isometry group in four dimensions that leaves the origin fixed, or correspondingly, an isometry group of a 3-sphere. History on four-dimensional groups

  8. Euclidean group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_group

    The Euclidean group is a subgroup of the group of affine transformations. It has as subgroups the translational group T( n ), and the orthogonal group O( n ). Any element of E( n ) is a translation followed by an orthogonal transformation (the linear part of the isometry), in a unique way: x ↦ A ( x + b ) {\displaystyle x\mapsto A(x+b)} where ...

  9. Tetrahedral symmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedral_symmetry

    It is a subgroup of the full icosahedral symmetry group (as isometry group, not just as abstract group), with 4 of the 10 3-fold axes. The conjugacy classes of T h include those of T, with the two classes of 4 combined, and each with inversion: identity; 8 × rotation by 120° (C 3) 3 × rotation by 180° (C 2) inversion (S 2) 8 × ...