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Hesse's Theorem for a Quadrilateral Whose Sides Touch a Conic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

William G. Brown*
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
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Extract

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Hesse's theorem states that “if two pairs of opposite vertices of a quadrilateral are respectively conjugate with respect to a given polarity, then the remaining pair of vertices are also conjugate ”.

In the real projective plane there cannot exist such a quadrilateral, all four sides of which are self-conjugate [1, §5.54]. We shall show that such a quadrilateral exists in PG(2, 3), and that any geometry in which such a quadrilateral exists contains the configuration 134 of PG(2,3). We shall thus provide a synthetic proof of Hesse1 s theorem for a quadrilateral of this type, which, together with [1, § 5.55], constitutes a complete proof of the theorem valid in general Desarguesian projective geometry. We shall also show analytically that a finite Desarguesian geometry which admits a Hessian quadrilateral all of whose sides touch a conic must be of type PG(2, 3n).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Mathematical Society 1960

References

1. Coxeter, H. S. M., The Real Projective Plane, second edition, (Cambridge, 1955).Google Scholar
2. O'Hara, C. W., Ward, D. R., An Introduction to Projective Geometry, (Oxford, 1937).Google Scholar