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Stellated regular heptagonal tiling of the model.
In non-Euclidean geometry, the Poincaré half-plane model is the upper half-plane, together with a metric, the Poincaré metric, that makes it a model of two-dimensional hyperbolic geometry. It is named after Henri Poincaré, but originated with Eugenio Beltrami, who used it, along with the Klein model and the Poincaré disk model (due to Riemann), to show that hyperbolic geometry was equiconsistent with Euclidean geometry. The disk model and the half-plane model are isomorphic under a conformal mapping.
Symmetry groupsThe projective linear group PGL(2,C) acts on the Riemann sphere by the Möbius transformations. The subgroup that stabilizes the upper half-plane is PGL(2,R), the transforms with real coefficients, and these act transitively and isometrically on the upper half-plane, making it a homogeneous space. There are four closely related Lie groups that act on the upper half-plane by fractional linear transformations and preserve the hyperbolic distance.
The relationship of these groups to the Poincaré model is as follows:
Important subgroups of the isometry group are the Fuchsian groups. One also frequently sees the modular group SL(2,Z). This group is important in two ways. First, it is a symmetry group of the square 2x2 lattice of points. Thus, functions that are periodic on a square grid, such as modular forms and elliptic functions, will thus inherit an SL(2,Z) symmetry from the grid. Second, SL(2,Z) is of course a subgroup of SL(2,R), and thus has a hyperbolic behavior embedded in it. In particular, SL(2,Z) can be used to tessellate the hyperbolic plane into cells of equal (Poincaré) area. Isometric symmetryThe group action of the special linear group PSL(2,R) on H is defined by Note that the action is transitive, in that for any The stabilizer or isotropy subroup of an element z in H is the set of Since any element z in H is mapped to i by an element of PSL(2,R), this means that the isotropy subgroup of any z is isomorphic to SO(2). Thus, H = PSL(2,R)/SO(2). Alternately, the bundle of unit-length tangent vectors on the upper half-plane, called the unit tangent bundle, is isomorphic to PSL(2,R). The upper half-plane is tessellated into free regular sets by the modular group SL(2,Z). GeodesicsThe geodesics for this metric tensor are circular arcs perpendicular to the real axis (half-circles whose origin is on the real axis) and straight vertical lines ending on the real axis. The unit-speed geodesic going up vertically, through the point i is given by Because PSL(2,R) acts transitively by isometries of the upper half-plane, this geodesic is mapped into the other geodesics through the action of PSL(2,R). Thus, the general unit-speed geodesic is given by This provides the complete description of the geodesic flow on the unit-length tangent bundle (complex line bundle) on the upper half-plane. See alsoReferences
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