|  Geometry | 
In General, Types of Geometries
  * Idea: Different geometries
    can be related to each other by starting from the classical Euclidean geometry,
    and stating the sense in which each one generalizes one of its elements; If Euclidean
    geometry is X = \(\mathbb R\)n
    with the Euclidean group of rigid motions (SO(n)
    ×s Tn,
    rotations and translations) as symmetry group G, and has a globally defined
    positive-definite bilinear form on TX × TX, then the
    following are some of the generalizations.
  * Riemannian  geometry:
    Generalize the Euclidean bilinear form to a local metric (allow curvature);
    The local symmetry group is SO(n).
  * Minkowskian geometry: Use
    a bilinear form with one negative eigenvalue; The symmetry group then becomes
    the Poincaré group; Can also allow more negative eigenvalue, to obtain other
    pseudo-Euclidean geometries).
  * Lorentzian geometry:
    Generalize the Minkowskian bilinear form to a local metric (allow curvature);
    The local symmetry group is SO(1, n−1).
  * Klein geometry: Generalize the
    global symmetry group G; One can express X = G/H,
    with H the stabilizer of some arbitrary x ∈ X.
  * Cartan geometry: Generalize
    TX to another space that approximates X locally in Euclidean
    geometry; Or allow curvature in Klein geometry.
  @ General references: Hilbert & Cohn-Vossen 52;
    Von Neumann 60;
    Blumenthal 61;
    Blumenthal & Menger 70; 
    Dubrovin, Novikov & Fomenko 79;
    Rees 83;
    Ryan 86; Brannan et al 99 [II];
    Reid & Szendrői 05 [and topology, II];
    Benz 07 [classical geometries];
    Peterson Sigma(07)-a0708 [directions of research];
    Berger 10 [topics];
    Borceux 14 [axiomatic];
    Kappraff 14 [I, for non-mathematics students];
    Johnson 18 [geometries and transformations];
    Anderson a1811
      [Brackets Consistency as a pillar of geometry].
  @ Diophantine: Lang 60;
    Hindry & Silverman 00 [intro].
  @ Other types: Majid ht/94 [braided, intro];
    Dragovich mp/03 [non-Archimedean, adeles];
    Bezdek 10 [discrete geometry];
    > s.a. special relativity [hyperbolic].
   Types of metric geometries:
    see 2D, 3D, 4D,
    differential geometry; euclidean,
    lorentzian and riemannian geometry;
    complex structures.
 Types of metric geometries:
    see 2D, 3D, 4D,
    differential geometry; euclidean,
    lorentzian and riemannian geometry;
    complex structures.
   Other types of geometries:
    see affine, combinatorial geometry,
    Finite Geometry, finsler,
    Graded, non-commutative,
    projective, symplectic geometry.
 Other types of geometries:
    see affine, combinatorial geometry,
    Finite Geometry, finsler,
    Graded, non-commutative,
    projective, symplectic geometry.
History
  > s.a. euclidean geometry; history of mathematics.
  * Origin: It started in
    Greece as the study of plane and solid figures, and came to be considered as
    the science of points and their relations in space; Other than the study of
    regular figures, until Descartes introduced analytic geometry and the invention
    of the calculus in 1665–1675, a lot of geometry was experimental.
  * Kant: Inspired partly by
    Newton's success to found physics on geometrical principles, thought of
    geometry as synthetic but a priori; Wrong, as seen after the development
    of the many non-euclidean geometries in the XIX century.
  * Poincaré: Held the
    view that geometry is a convention and cannot be tested experimentally.
  * Lobachevskii, Bolyai, Gauss:
    Showed that non-euclidean geometries are possible, but used constant curvature
    (rigid displacements); The distinction between physical and mathematical
    geometry begins.
  * Unified framework: Two proposals
    were made, Riemann's theory of manifolds, and Klein's Erlangen Programme.
  * Erlangen Programme (Klein 1872):
    A geometry is characterized by an underlying set and a group of transformations
    acting on it, that are to be considered as equivalences; It won prompt acceptance,
    encouraged Lie (Lie groups), Poincaré (algebraic topology), Minkowski,
    and stimulated the conventionalist view of geometry.
  * Manifold theory (Riemann): Makes
    geometry local and introduces gab
    and Rabcd; Perfected by
    Christoffel, Schur, Ricci-Curbastro, and used in physics by Einstein (but H Hertz
    would have, if given the time).
  @ General references: Heilbron 98;
    Berger 00 [Riemannian, XX century];
    Mlodinow 02;
    Henderson & Taimina 04;
    Gray 10 [XIX century];
    Holme 10 [and overview];
    Ostermann & Wanner 12 [upper-level undergraduate];
    Kragh a1205 [attempts to establish
      links between non-Euclidean geometry and the physical and astronomical sciences, 1830 to 1910];
    De Risi ed-15;
    Biagioli 16 [non-Euclidean geometry in neo-Kantianism];
    Smilga 19,
    Jenkovszky UJP(19)-a1912 [non-Euclidean].
  @ Erlangen Programme: in Reid 70;
    in Torretti 83;
    in Stewart ThSc(90)may;
    Kisil in(12)-a1106 [overview];
    Goenner a1510-in [influence on physical theories];
    > s.a. symmetries in physics.
Techniques in Geometry > s.a. Coarse Structures;
  curvature of a connection; spectral geometry.
  * Constructive solid geometry:
    A computer graphics technique used for modeling complex objects; Uses cubes as
    primitive objects, and manipulates them by scaling, stretching, and the binary
    operations of difference, union, and intersection.
  * Integral geometry: Sometimes taken
    to mean the study of methods for the reconstruction of functions in a real affine or
    projective space from data on integrals over lines, planes, spheres or other sets.
  @ Computational methods: Anderson & Torre JMP(12)-a1103 [symbolic tools for differential geometry];
    > s.a. statistical geometry [including computational geometry].
  @ Integral geometry: Santaló 76;
    Palamodov 04.
Applications > s.a. differential geometry;
  types of metrics [information geometry].
  * In physics: Every revolution
    in physics has brought to the forefront a new type of geometry; The geometry used
    to describe spacetime in classical physics is Euclidean geometry, in relativistic
    gravity Riemannian and Lorentzian differential geometry; To describe Hamilton and
    Lagrange's classical mechanics and classical field theory we use symplectic geometry
    and variational calculus on jet bundles; Gauge theory is formulated in terms of the
    geometry of fibre bundles; In quantum theory one deforms the classical structures
    into non-commutative ones; > s.a. Urs Schreiber's
  page.
  @ In physics: Mackey in(88);
    Atiyah JMP(95) [quantum physics];
    Durham phy/00 [history];
    Meschini PhD(08)-a0804 [and relativity and quantum theory];
    Hacyan EJP(09) [geometry as an object of experience];
    Atiyah a1009-ln [unsolved problems];
    Boya IJGMP(12);
    Eschrig 11;
    Lavenda 11 [non-euclidean geometries and relativity];
    Cariñena et al 15 [geometry from dynamics];
    Kerner a1712 [conceptual, historical, Thales];
    > s.a. field theory; mathematical physics.
  @ Quantum geometry: issue JMP(95)#11;
    Meschini et al SHPMP(05)gq/04 [pregeometry];
    > s.a. discrete geometry; geometry in quantum gravity.
  @ Other physics topics: Hélein a0904-conf [new geometries from soldering forms];
    Cattaneo et al ed-11 [higher structures];
    > s.a. Area Metric; finsler geometry;
      optics [optical geometry]; unified models.
  @ Other applications: Luminet IAU-a0911 [science and art];
    Glaeser 12.
  > Spacetime geometry:
    see general relativity; spacetime
    and spacetime models.
Philosophy of Geometry > s.a. spacetime.
  * Idea: One must distinguish
    between mathematical geometry and physical geometry; The first one is analytic
    and a priori, the second one synthetic and a posteriori.
  * Conventionalist view:
    Physical geometry depends on conventions; We can assign any geometry to physical
    spacetime, as long as we choose our rules for measuring lengths and our physical
    laws accordingly (Poincaré); A criterion for the choice is the disappearance
    of universal forces (Reichenbach).
  * End of XIX century:
    Trilemma between apriorism, empiricism, conventionalism.
  * Helmholtz: Geometry is the
    study of congruences of rigid bodies; This supported geometric conventionalism.
  @ General references:
    Sexl GRG(70) [conventionalism];
    Grünbaum 73,
    in(77);
    in Torretti 78;
    Magnani 01.
  @ In relation to special relativity: Schlick 20;
    Reichenbach 57;
    Carnap 66.
  @ Related topics: Earman GRG(70) [empiricist view];
    Carrier PhSc(90)sep [physical geometry].
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