Horocycle

Summary

In hyperbolic geometry, a horocycle (from Greek roots meaning "boundary circle"), sometimes called an oricycle or limit circle, is a curve of constant curvature which converges asymptotically in both directions to a single ideal point, called the centre of the horocycle. The perpendicular geodesics through every point on a horocycle are limiting parallels, and also all converge asymptotically to the centre. It is the two-dimensional case of a horosphere.

A blue horocycle in the Poincaré disk model and some red normals. The normals converge asymptotically to the upper central ideal point.

In Euclidean space, all curves of constant curvature are either straight lines (geodesics) or circles, but in a hyperbolic space of sectional curvature the curves of constant curvature come in four types: geodesics with curvature hypercycles with curvature horocycles with curvature and circles with curvature

Any two horocycles are congruent, and can be superimposed by an isometry (translation and rotation) of the hyperbolic plane.

A horocycle can also be described as the limit of the circles that share a tangent at a given point, as their radii tend to infinity, or as the limit of hypercycles tangent at the point as the distances from their axes tends to infinity.

Two horocycles with the same centre are called concentric. As for conceptric circles, any geodesic perpendicular to a horocycle is also perpendicular to every concentric horocycle.

Properties edit

 
  • Through every pair of points there are 2 horocycles. The centres of the horocycles are the ideal points of the perpendicular bisector of the segment between them.
  • No three points of a horocycle are on a line, circle or hypercycle.
  • All horocycles are congruent. (Even concentric horocycles are congruent to each other)
  • A straight line, circle, hypercycle, or other horocycle cuts a horocycle in at most two points.
  • The perpendicular bisector of a chord of a horocycle is a normal of that horocycle and the bisector bisects the arc subtended by the chord and is an axis of symmetry of that horocycle.
  • The length of an arc of a horocycle between two points is:
longer than the length of the line segment between those two points,
longer than the length of the arc of a hypercycle between those two points and
shorter than the length of any circle arc between those two points.
  • The distance from a horocycle to its centre is infinite, and while in some models of hyperbolic geometry it looks like the two "ends" of a horocycle get closer and closer together and closer to its centre, this is not true; the two "ends" of a horocycle get further and further away from each other.
  • A regular apeirogon is circumscribed by either a horocycle or a hypercycle.
  • If C is the centre of a horocycle and A and B are points on the horocycle then the angles CAB and CBA are equal.[1]
  • The area of a sector of a horocycle (the area between two radii and the horocycle) is finite.[2]

Standardized Gaussian curvature edit

When the hyperbolic plane has the standardized Gaussian curvature K of −1:

  • The length s of an arc of a horocycle between two points is:
     
    where d is the distance between the two points, and sinh and cosh are hyperbolic functions.[3]
  • The length of an arc of a horocycle such that the tangent at one extremity is limiting parallel to the radius through the other extremity is 1.[4] the area enclosed between this horocycle and the radii is 1.[5]
  • The ratio of the arc lengths between two radii of two concentric horocycles where the horocycles are a distance 1 apart is e : 1.[6]

Representations in models of hyperbolic geometry edit

 
The order-3 apeirogonal tiling, {∞,3}, fills the hyperbolic plane with apeirogons whose vertices exist along horocyclic paths.

Poincaré disk model edit

In the Poincaré disk model of the hyperbolic plane, horocycles are represented by circles tangent to the boundary circle; the centre of the horocycle is the ideal point where the horocycle touches the boundary circle.

The compass and straightedge construction of the two horocycles through two points is the same construction of the CPP construction for the Special cases of Apollonius' problem where both points are inside the circle.

Poincaré half-plane model edit

In the Poincaré half-plane model, horocycles are represented by circles tangent to the boundary line, in which case their centre is the ideal point where the circle touches the boundary line.

When the centre of the horocycle is the ideal point at   then the horocycle is a line parallel to the boundary line.

The compass and straightedge construction in the first case is the same construction as the LPP construction for the Special cases of Apollonius' problem.

Hyperboloid model edit

In the hyperboloid model they are represented by intersections of the hyperboloid with planes whose normal lies on the asymptotic cone (i.e., is a null vector in three-dimensional Minkowski space.)

Metric edit

If the metric is normalized to have Gaussian curvature −1, then the horocycle is a curve of geodesic curvature 1 at every point.

Horocycle flow edit

Every horocycle is the orbit of a unipotent subgroup of PSL(2,R) in the hyperbolic plane. Moreover, the displacement at unit speed along the horocycle tangent to a given unit tangent vector induces a flow on the unit tangent bundle of the hyperbolic plane. This flow is called the horocycle flow of the hyperbolic plane.

Identifying the unit tangent bundle with the group PSL(2,R), the horocycle flow is given by the right-action of the unipotent subgroup  , where:

 
That is, the flow at time   starting from a vector represented by   is equal to  .

If   is a hyperbolic surface its unit tangent bundle also supports a horocycle flow. If   is uniformised as   the unit tangent bundle is identified with   and the flow starting at   is given by  . When   is compact, or more generally when   is a lattice, this flow is ergodic (with respect to the normalised Liouville measure). Moreover, in this setting Ratner's theorems describe very precisely the possible closures for its orbits.[7]

See also edit

 
Circles seen in an Apollonian gasket that are tangent to the external circle can be considered horocycles in a Poincaré disk model

References edit

  1. ^ Sossinsky, A.B. (2012). Geometries. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society. pp. 141–2. ISBN 9780821875711.
  2. ^ Coxeter, H.S.M. (1998). Non-Euclidean geometry (6. ed.). Washington, DC: Mathematical Assoc. of America. pp. 243–244. ISBN 978-0-88385-522-5.
  3. ^ Smogorzhevsky (1976). Lobachevskian Geometry. Moscow: Mir. p. 65.
  4. ^ Sommerville, D.M.Y. (2005). The elements of non-Euclidean geometry (Unabr. and unaltered republ. ed.). Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. p. 58. ISBN 0-486-44222-5.
  5. ^ Coxeter, H.S.M. (1998). Non-Euclidean geometry (6. ed.). Washington, DC: Mathematical Assoc. of America. p. 250. ISBN 978-0-88385-522-5.
  6. ^ Sommerville, D.M.Y. (2005). The elements of non-Euclidean geometry (Unabr. and unaltered republ. ed.). Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. p. 58. ISBN 0-486-44222-5.
  7. ^ Morris, Dave Witte (2005). Ratner's Theorems on Unipotent Flows. Chicago Lectures in Mathematics. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. arXiv:math/0310402. ISBN 978-0-226-53984-3. MR 2158954.
  • H. S. M. Coxeter (1961) Introduction to Geometry, §16.6: "Circles, horocycles, and equidistant curves", page 300, 1, John Wiley & Sons.
  • Four Pillars of Geometry p. 198