Near polygon
In mathematics, a near polygon is a concept in incidence geometry introduced by Ernest E. Shult and Arthur Yanushka in 1980. Shult and Yanushka showed the connection between the so-called tetrahedrally closed line-systems in Euclidean spaces and a class of point-line geometries which they called near polygons. These structures generalise the notion of generalized polygon as every generalized 2n-gon is a near 2n-gon of a particular kind. Near polygons were extensively studied and connection between them and dual polar spaces was shown in 1980s and early 1990s. Some sporadic simple groups, for example the Hall-Janko group and the Mathieu groups, act as automorphism groups of near polygons.
Definition
A near 2d-gon is an incidence structure, where is the set of points, is the set of lines and is the incidence relation, such that:- The maximum distance between two points is d.
- For every point and every line there exists a unique point on which is nearest to.
We can also give an alternate graph theoretic definition, a near 2d-gon is a connected graph of finite diameter d with the property that for every vertex x and every maximal clique M there exists a unique vertex x' in M nearest to x.
The maximal cliques of such a graph correspond to the lines in the incidence structure definition.
A near 0-gon is a single point while a near 2-gon is just a single line, i.e., a complete graph. A near quadrangle is same as a generalized quadrangle. In fact, it can be shown that every generalized 2d-gon is a near 2d-gon that satisfies the following two additional conditions:
- Every point is incident with at least two lines.
- For every two points x, y at distance i < d, there exists a unique neighbour of y at distance i − 1 from x.
Examples
- All connected bipartite graphs are near polygons. In fact, any near polygon that has precisely two points per line must be a connected bipartite graph.
- All finite generalized polygons except the projective planes.
- All dual polar spaces.
- The Hall–Janko near octagon, also known as the Cohen-Tits near octagon associated with the Hall–Janko group. It can be constructed by choosing the conjugacy class of 315 central involutions of the Hall-Janko group as points and lines as three element subsets whenever x and y commute.
- The M24 near hexagon related to the Mathieu group M24 and the extended binary Golay code. It is constructed by taking the 759 octads in the Witt design S corresponding to the Golay code as points and a triple of three pairwise disjoint octads as lines.
- Take the partitions of into n + 1 2-subsets as points and the partitions into n − 1 2-subsets and one 4-subset as lines. A point is incident to a line if as a partition it is a refinement of the line. This gives us a near 2n-gon with three points on each line, usually denoted Hn. Its full automorphism group is the symmetric group S2n+2.
Regular near polygons