词条 | Euclidean group | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
In mathematics, the Euclidean group E(n), also known as ISO(n) or similar, is the symmetry group of n-dimensional Euclidean space. Its elements are the isometries associated with the Euclidean distance, and are called Euclidean isometries, Euclidean transformations or rigid transformations. Euclidean isometries are classified into direct isometries and indirect isometries, an indirect isometry being an isometry that transforms any object into its mirror image. The direct Euclidean isometries form a group, the special Euclidean group, whose elements are called Euclidean motions, displacements or rigid motions. These groups are among the oldest and most studied, at least in the cases of dimension 2 and 3 – implicitly, long before the concept of group was invented. OverviewDimensionalityThe number of degrees of freedom for E(n) is {{nowrap|n(n + 1)/2}}, which gives 3 in case {{nowrap|1=n = 2}}, and 6 for {{nowrap|1=n = 3}}. Of these, n can be attributed to available translational symmetry, and the remaining {{nowrap|n(n − 1)/2}} to rotational symmetry. Direct and indirect isometriesThere is a subgroup E+(n) of the direct isometries, i.e., isometries preserving orientation, also called rigid motions; they are the moves of a rigid body in n-dimensional space. These include the translations, and the rotations, which together generate E+(n). E+(n) is also called a special Euclidean group, and denoted SE(n). The others are the indirect isometries, also called opposite isometries. The subgroup E+(n) is of index 2. In other words, the indirect isometries form a single coset of E+(n). Given any indirect isometry, for example a given reflection R that reverses orientation, all indirect isometries are given as DR, where D is a direct isometry. The Euclidean group for SE(3) is used for the kinematics of a rigid body, in classical mechanics. A rigid body motion is in effect the same as a curve in the Euclidean group. Starting with a body B oriented in a certain way at time {{nowrap|1=t = 0}}, its orientation at any other time is related to the starting orientation by a Euclidean motion, say f(t). Setting {{nowrap|1=t = 0}}, we have {{nowrap|1=f(0) = I}}, the identity transformation. This means that the curve will always lie inside E+(3), in fact: starting at the identity transformation I, such a continuous curve can certainly never reach anything other than a direct isometry. This is for simple topological reasons: the determinant of the transformation cannot jump from +1 to −1. The Euclidean groups are not only topological groups, they are Lie groups, so that calculus notions can be adapted immediately to this setting. Relation to the affine groupThe Euclidean group E(n) is a subgroup of the affine group for n dimensions, and in such a way as to respect the semidirect product structure of both{{clarify|date=October 2016}} groups. This gives, a fortiori, two ways of writing elements in an explicit notation. These are:
Details for the first representation are given in the next section. In the terms of Felix Klein's Erlangen programme, we read off from this that Euclidean geometry, the geometry of the Euclidean group of symmetries, is therefore a specialisation of affine geometry. All affine theorems apply. The origin of Euclidean geometry allows definition of the notion of distance, from which angle can then be deduced. Detailed discussionSubgroup structure, matrix and vector representationThe Euclidean group is a subgroup of the group of affine transformations. It has as subgroups the translational group T(n), and the orthogonal group O(n). Any element of E(n) is a translation followed by an orthogonal transformation (the linear part of the isometry), in a unique way: where A is an orthogonal matrix or the same orthogonal transformation followed by a translation: with {{math|1=c = Ab}} T(n) is a normal subgroup of E(n): for any translation t and any isometry u, we have u−1tu again a translation (one can say, through a displacement that is u acting on the displacement of t; a translation does not affect a displacement, so equivalently, the displacement is the result of the linear part of the isometry acting on t). Together, these facts imply that E(n) is the semidirect product of O(n) extended by T(n), which is written as . In other words, O(n) is (in the natural way) also the quotient group of E(n) by T(n): Now SO(n), the special orthogonal group, is a subgroup of O(n), of index two. Therefore, E(n) has a subgroup E+(n), also of index two, consisting of direct isometries. In these cases the determinant of A is 1. They are represented as a translation followed by a rotation, rather than a translation followed by some kind of reflection (in dimensions 2 and 3, these are the familiar reflections in a mirror line or plane, which may be taken to include the origin, or in 3D, a rotoreflection). This relation is commonly written as: or, equivalently: . ===Subgroups=== Types of subgroups of E(n):
Examples in 3D of combinations:
===Overview of isometries in up to three dimensions=== E(1), E(2), and E(3) can be categorized as follows, with degrees of freedom:
Chasles' theorem asserts that any element of E+(3) is a screw displacement. See also 3D isometries that leave the origin fixed, space group, involution. Commuting isometriesFor some isometry pairs composition does not depend on order:
Conjugacy classesThe translations by a given distance in any direction form a conjugacy class; the translation group is the union of those for all distances. In 1D, all reflections are in the same class. In 2D, rotations by the same angle in either direction are in the same class. Glide reflections with translation by the same distance are in the same class. In 3D:
See also
References
2 : Lie groups|Euclidean symmetries |
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