Simply, a collineation is a one-to-one map from one projective space to another, or from a projective space to itself, such that the images of collinear points are themselves collinear. One may formalize this using various ways of presenting a projective space. Also, the case of the projective line is special, and hence generally treated differently.
Linear algebra For a projective space defined in terms of
linear algebra (as the projectivization of a
vector space), a collineation is a map between the projective spaces that is
order-preserving with respect to
inclusion of subspaces. Formally, let
V be a vector space over a
field K and
W a vector space over a field
L. Consider the projective spaces
PG(
V) and
PG(
W), consisting of the
vector lines of
V and
W. Call
D(
V) and
D(
W) the set of subspaces of
V and
W respectively. A collineation from
PG(
V) to
PG(
W) is a map α :
D(
V) →
D(
W), such that: • α is a bijection. •
A ⊆
B ⇔ α(
A) ⊆ α(
B) for all
A,
B in
D(
V).
Axiomatically Given a
projective space defined axiomatically in terms of an
incidence structure (a set of points
P, lines
L, and an
incidence relation I specifying which points lie on which lines, satisfying certain axioms), a collineation between projective spaces thus defined then being a bijective function
f between the sets of points and a bijective function
g between the set of lines, preserving the incidence relation. Every projective space of dimension greater than or equal to three is isomorphic to the
projectivization of a linear space over a
division ring, so in these dimensions this definition is no more general than the linear-algebraic one above, but in dimension two there are other projective planes, namely the
non-Desarguesian planes, and this definition allows one to define collineations in such projective planes. For dimension one, the set of points lying on a single projective line defines a projective space, and the resulting notion of collineation is just any bijection of the set.
Collineations of the projective line For a projective space of dimension one (a projective line; the projectivization of a vector space of
dimension two), all points are collinear, so the collineation group is exactly the
symmetric group of the points of the projective line. This is different from the behavior in higher dimensions, and thus one gives a more restrictive definition, specified so that the
fundamental theorem of projective geometry holds. In this definition, when
V has dimension two, a collineation from
PG(
V) to
PG(
W) is a map , such that: • The
zero subspace of
V is mapped to the zero subspace of
W. •
V is mapped to
W. • There is a nonsingular
semilinear map β from
V to
W such that, for all
v in
V, \alpha(\langle v\rangle)=\langle \beta(v)\rangle This last requirement ensures that collineations are all semilinear maps. ==Types==