Title: Activity 2-20: The Cross-ratio
1www.carom-maths.co.uk
Activity 2-20 The Cross-ratio
2What happens in the above diagram if we
calculate ?
3Say A (p, ap), B (q, bq), C (r, cr), D
(s, ds).
So ap mp k, bq mq k, cr mr k, ds ms
k.
.
4This is the cross-ratio of a, b, c and d.
.
Strange fact this answer does not depend on m or
k. So whatever line y mx k falls across the
four others, the cross-ratio of lengths
will be unchanged.
5This makes the cross-ratio an invariant, and of
great interest in a field of maths known as
projective geometry.
Projective geometry might be described as the
geometry of perspective. You could argue it is
a more fundamental form of geometry than the
Euclidean geometry we generally use.
The cross-ratio has an ancient history it was
known to Euclid and also to Pappus, who mentioned
its invariant properties.
6Given four complex numbers z1, z2, z3, z4, we
can define their cross-ratio as
.
Theorem the cross-ratio of four complex numbers
is real if and only if the four numbers lie on a
straight line or a circle.
Task certainly 1, i, -1 and i lie on a circle.
Show the cross-ratio of these numbers is real.
7Proof we can see that (z3-z1)eia ?(z2-z1),
and (z2-z4)eiß µ(z3-z4). Multiplying these
together gives
(z3-z1) (z2-z4)ei(aß) ?µ(z3-z4)(z2-z1), or
8So the cross-ratio is real if and only if
ei(aß) is, which happens if and only if
a ß 0 or a ß p.
But a ß 0 implies that a ß 0, and z1,
z2, z3 and z4 lie on a straight line, while a
ß p implies that a and ß are opposite angles
in a cyclic quadrilateral, which means that z1,
z2, z3 and z4 lie on a circle.
We are done!
9With thanks to
Paul Gailiunas
Carom is written by Jonny Griffiths,
mail_at_jonny.griffiths.net