Isometry
In geometry and mathematical analysis, an isometry is a distance-preserving mapping.
General Definitions
The notion of isometry comes in two main flavors: global isometry and a weaker notion path isometry. Both are often called just isometry and you should guess from context which one is used.
A global isometry is a map between metric spaces which preserves distances. A path isometry is a map which preserve lengths of curves.
As an example, the map R R defined by
is a path isometry but not a global isometry.
Global isometry is automatically injective and often assumed to be that is surjective (to make it invertable). If so the set of isometries from a metric space to itself form a group with respect to compositon (called isometry group).
Isometry group of Euclidean space
In Euclidean space with the usual distance function, the (global) isometries can be characterized: there are no more than the 'expected' examples generated by rotations, reflections and translations. To put this more accurately, the isometries form a group, that is the semidirect product of the orthogonal group and the group of translations. (This group is sometimes called the Galilean group, at least for three dimensions and in relation with its role in Newtonian mechanics as expressed by permissible changes of frame of reference. See Galilean transformation.)
Glide reflections
Within the isometry group of the plane, the product of a rotation and a translation can always be expressed as a single rotation (or translation). On the other hand the product of a reflection and a translation is usually not a reflection, but can produce a transformation with no everyday name: a glide reflection.
For example, there is an isometry consisting of the reflection on the x-axis, followed by translation of one unit parallel to it. In co-ordinates, it takes (x,y) to (x+1,-y). It fixes a system of parallel lines, but is a combination of a reflection in a line and a translation parallel to that line. If one considers the effect of a reflection combined with any translation, it is a glide reflection with respect to a line parallel to the line of the reflection, as one sees by resolving the translation into components parallel and orthogonal to that line.
See also: congruence (geometry), similarity (mathematics).
Isometric projection or isometric view is the name given to a type of technical drawing / projection used in fields such as Mechanical Engineering or Architecture that makes an object/ building visible from three planes/co-ordinates.
Referenced By
Improper rotation | List of mathematical topics (G-I) | List of mathematical topics (G-Z) | Proper rotation
|