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Linear Spaces with Few Lines [electronic resource] / by Klaus Metsch.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Mathematics ; 1490Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1991Description: XIV, 202 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540464440
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 511.6 23
LOC classification:
  • QA164-167.2
Online resources:
Contents:
Definition and basic properties of linear spaces -- Lower bounds for the number of lines -- Basic properties and results of (n+1,1)-designs -- Points of degree n -- Linear spaces with few lines -- Embedding (n+1,1)-designs into projective planes -- An optimal bound for embedding linear spaces into projective planes -- The theorem of totten -- Linear spaces with n2+n+1 points -- A hypothetical structure -- Linear spaces with n2+n+2 lines -- Points of degree n and another characterization of the linear spaces L(n,d) -- The non-existence of certain (7,1)-designs and determination of A(5) and A(6) -- A result on graph theory with an application to linear spaces -- Linear spaces in which every long line meets only few lines -- s-fold inflated projective planes -- The Dowling Wilson Conjecture -- Uniqueness of embeddings.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: A famous theorem in the theory of linear spaces states that every finite linear space has at least as many lines as points. This result of De Bruijn and Erd|s led to the conjecture that every linear space with "few lines" canbe obtained from a projective plane by changing only a small part of itsstructure. Many results related to this conjecture have been proved in the last twenty years. This monograph surveys the subject and presents several new results, such as the recent proof of the Dowling-Wilsonconjecture. Typical methods used in combinatorics are developed so that the text can be understood without too much background. Thus the book will be of interest to anybody doing combinatorics and can also help other readers to learn the techniques used in this particular field.
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Definition and basic properties of linear spaces -- Lower bounds for the number of lines -- Basic properties and results of (n+1,1)-designs -- Points of degree n -- Linear spaces with few lines -- Embedding (n+1,1)-designs into projective planes -- An optimal bound for embedding linear spaces into projective planes -- The theorem of totten -- Linear spaces with n2+n+1 points -- A hypothetical structure -- Linear spaces with n2+n+2 lines -- Points of degree n and another characterization of the linear spaces L(n,d) -- The non-existence of certain (7,1)-designs and determination of A(5) and A(6) -- A result on graph theory with an application to linear spaces -- Linear spaces in which every long line meets only few lines -- s-fold inflated projective planes -- The Dowling Wilson Conjecture -- Uniqueness of embeddings.

A famous theorem in the theory of linear spaces states that every finite linear space has at least as many lines as points. This result of De Bruijn and Erd|s led to the conjecture that every linear space with "few lines" canbe obtained from a projective plane by changing only a small part of itsstructure. Many results related to this conjecture have been proved in the last twenty years. This monograph surveys the subject and presents several new results, such as the recent proof of the Dowling-Wilsonconjecture. Typical methods used in combinatorics are developed so that the text can be understood without too much background. Thus the book will be of interest to anybody doing combinatorics and can also help other readers to learn the techniques used in this particular field.

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