Quaternionic projective line The one-dimensional projective space over \mathbb{H} is called the "projective line" in generalization of the
complex projective line. For example, it was used (implicitly) in 1947 by P. G. Gormley to extend the
Möbius group to the quaternion context with
linear fractional transformations. For the linear fractional transformations of an associative
ring with 1, see
projective line over a ring and the homography group GL(2,
A). From the topological point of view the quaternionic projective line is the 4-sphere, and in fact these are
diffeomorphic manifolds. The fibration mentioned previously is from the 7-sphere, and is an example of a
Hopf fibration. Explicit expressions for coordinates for the 4-sphere can be found in the article on the
Fubini–Study metric.
Quaternionic projective plane The 8-dimensional \mathbb{HP}^{2} has a
circle action, by the group of complex scalars of absolute value 1 acting on the other side (so on the right, as the convention for the action of
c above is on the left). Therefore, the
quotient manifold :\mathbb{HP}^{2}/\mathrm{U}(1) may be taken, writing
U(1) for the
circle group. It has been shown that this quotient is the 7-
sphere, a result of
Vladimir Arnold from 1996, later rediscovered by
Edward Witten and
Michael Atiyah. ==References==