A duality that is an
involution (has order two) is called a
polarity. It is necessary to distinguish between polarities of general projective spaces and those that arise from the slightly more general definition of plane duality. It is also possible to give more precise statements in the case of a
finite geometry, so we shall emphasize the results in finite projective planes.
Polarities of general projective spaces If is a duality of , with a skewfield, then a common notation is defined by for a subspace of . Hence, a polarity is a duality for which for every subspace of . It is also common to bypass mentioning the dual space and write, in terms of the associated sesquilinear form: : S^{\bot} = \{\mathbf{u} \text{ in }V \colon \varphi (\mathbf{u},\mathbf{x}) =0 \text{ for all }\mathbf{x} \text{ in } S \}. A sesquilinear form is
reflexive if implies . A duality is a polarity if and only if the (nondegenerate) sesquilinear form defining it is reflexive. Polarities have been classified, a result of that has been reproven several times. Let be a (left) vector space over the skewfield and be a reflexive nondegenerate sesquilinear form on with companion anti-automorphism . If is the sesquilinear form associated with a polarity then either: • (hence, is a field) and for all in , that is, is a bilinear form. In this case, the polarity is called
orthogonal (or
ordinary). If the characteristic of the field is two, then to be in this case there must exist a vector with , and the polarity is called a
pseudo polarity. • (hence, is a field) and for all in . The polarity is called a
null polarity (or a
symplectic polarity) and can only exist when the projective dimension is odd. • (here need not be a field) and for all in . Such a polarity is called a
unitary polarity (or a
Hermitian polarity). A point of is an
absolute point (self-conjugate point) with respect to polarity if . Similarly, a
hyperplane is an
absolute hyperplane (self-conjugate hyperplane) if . Expressed in other terms, a point is an absolute point of polarity with associated sesquilinear form if and if is written in terms of matrix , . The set of absolute points of each type of polarity can be described. We again restrict the discussion to the case that is a field. • If is a field whose characteristic is not two, the set of absolute points of an orthogonal polarity form a nonsingular
quadric (if is infinite, this might be empty). If the characteristic is two, the absolute points of a pseudo polarity form a hyperplane. • All the points of the space are absolute points of a null polarity. • The absolute points of a Hermitian polarity form a
Hermitian variety, which may be empty if is infinite. When composed with itself, the correlation (in any dimension) produces the
identity function, so it is a polarity. The set of absolute points of this polarity would be the points whose homogeneous coordinates satisfy the equation: :. Which points are in this point set depends on the field . If then the set is empty, there are no absolute points (and no absolute hyperplanes). On the other hand, if the set of absolute points form a nondegenerate
quadric (a
conic in two-dimensional space). If is a
finite field of odd
characteristic the absolute points also form a quadric, but if the characteristic is even the absolute points form a hyperplane (this is an example of a pseudo polarity). Under any duality, the point is called the
pole of the hyperplane , and this hyperplane is called the
polar of the point . Using this terminology, the absolute points of a polarity are the points that are incident with their polars and the absolute hyperplanes are the hyperplanes that are incident with their poles.
Polarities in finite projective planes By
Wedderburn's theorem every finite skewfield is a field and an automorphism of order two (other than the identity) can only exist in a finite field whose order is a square. These facts help to simplify the general situation for finite
Desarguesian planes. We have: If is a polarity of the finite Desarguesian projective plane where for some prime , then the number of absolute points of is if is orthogonal or if is unitary. In the orthogonal case, the absolute points lie on a
conic if is odd or form a line if . The unitary case can only occur if is a square; the absolute points and absolute lines form a
unital. In the general projective plane case where duality means
plane duality, the definitions of polarity, absolute elements, pole and polar remain the same. Let denote a projective plane of order . Counting arguments can establish that for a polarity of : The polarity has at least absolute points and if is not a square, exactly absolute points. If has exactly absolute points then; • if is odd, the absolute points form an
oval whose tangents are the absolute lines; or • if is even, the absolute points are
collinear on a non-absolute line. An upper bound on the number of absolute points in the case that is a square was given by Seib and a purely combinatorial argument can establish: A polarity in a projective plane of square order has at most absolute points. Furthermore, if the number of absolute points is , then the absolute points and absolute lines form a
unital (i.e., every line of the plane meets this set of absolute points in either or points). ==Poles and polars==