Quite often, it appears there are two or more distinct
geometries with
isomorphic automorphism groups. There arises the question of reading the Erlangen program from the
abstract group, to the geometry. One example:
oriented (i.e.,
reflections not included)
elliptic geometry (i.e., the surface of an
n-sphere with opposite points identified) and
oriented spherical geometry (the same
non-Euclidean geometry, but with opposite points not identified) have
isomorphic automorphism group,
SO(n+1) for even
n. These may appear to be distinct. It turns out, however, that the geometries are very closely related, in a way that can be made precise. To take another example,
elliptic geometries with different
radii of curvature have isomorphic automorphism groups. That does not really count as a critique as all such geometries are isomorphic. General
Riemannian geometry falls outside the boundaries of the program.
Complex,
dual and
double (also known as split-complex) numbers appear as homogeneous spaces SL(2,
R)/H for the group
SL(2,R) and its subgroups H=A, N, K. The group SL(2,
R) acts on these homogeneous spaces by
linear fractional transformations and a large portion of the respective geometries can be obtained in a uniform way from the Erlangen program. Some further notable examples have come up in physics. Firstly,
n-dimensional
hyperbolic geometry,
n-dimensional
de Sitter space and (
n−1)-dimensional
inversive geometry all have isomorphic automorphism groups, :\mathrm{O}(n,1)/\mathrm{C}_2,\ the
orthochronous Lorentz group, for . But these are apparently distinct geometries. Here some interesting results enter, from the physics. It has been shown that physics models in each of the three geometries are "dual" for some models. Again,
n-dimensional
anti-de Sitter space and (
n−1)-dimensional
conformal space with "Lorentzian" signature (in contrast with
conformal space with "Euclidean" signature, which is identical to
inversive geometry, for three dimensions or greater) have isomorphic automorphism groups, but are distinct geometries. Once again, there are models in physics with "dualities" between both
spaces. See
AdS/CFT for more details. The covering group of SU(2,2) is isomorphic to the covering group of SO(4,2), which is the symmetry group of a 4D conformal Minkowski space and a 5D anti-de Sitter space and a complex four-dimensional
twistor space. The Erlangen program can therefore still be considered fertile, in relation with dualities in physics. In the seminal paper which introduced
categories,
Saunders Mac Lane and
Samuel Eilenberg stated: "This may be regarded as a continuation of the Klein Erlanger Programm, in the sense that a geometrical space with its group of transformations is generalized to a category with its algebra of mappings." Relations of the Erlangen program with work of
Charles Ehresmann on
groupoids in geometry is considered in the article below by Pradines. In
mathematical logic, the Erlangen program also served as an inspiration for
Alfred Tarski in his analysis of
logical notions. ==References==