Line group

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A line group is a mathematical way of describing symmetries associated with moving along a line. These symmetries include repeating along that line, making that line a one-dimensional lattice. However, line groups may have more than one dimension, and they may involve those dimensions in its isometries or symmetry transformations.

One constructs a line group by taking a point group in the full dimensions of the space, and then adding translations or offsets along the line to each of the point group's elements, in the fashion of constructing a space group. These offsets include the repeats, and a fraction of the repeat, one fraction for each element. For convenience, the fractions are scaled to the size of the repeat; they are thus within the line's unit cell segment.

There are 2 one-dimensional line groups. They are the infinite limits of the discrete two-dimensional point groups Cn and Dn:

Notations Description Example
Intl Orbifold Coxeter P.G.
p1∞∞[∞]+C Translations. Abstract group Z, the integers under addition ... --> --> --> --> ...
p1m*∞∞[∞]D Reflections. Abstract group Dih, the infinite dihedral group ... --> <-- --> <-- ...

Two-dimensional

There are 7 frieze groups, which involve reflections along the line, reflections perpendicular to the line, and 180° rotations in the two dimensions.

7 frieze group notations and diagram
IUC Orbifold Schönflies Conway Coxeter Fundamental
domain
p1∞∞CC[∞,1]+
p1m1*∞∞C∞vCD2∞[∞,1]
p11g∞xS2∞CC2∞[∞+,2+]
p11m∞*C∞h±C[∞+,2]
p222∞DD2∞[∞,2]+
p2mg2*∞D∞dDD4∞[∞,2+]
p2mm*22∞D∞h±D2∞[∞,2]

Three-dimensional

See also

References

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