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Revision as of 01:40, 21 June 2023 by Jacobolus(talk | contribs)(Undid revision 1161140018 by Tamfang (talk) – it should be an ordered (or otherwise indexed) pair because without distinguishing the elements it is impossible to describe how to convert from one pair to another. This is similar to the way a basis for a vector space often needs an order)
A fundamental pair of periods is a pair of complex numbers such that their ratio is not real. If considered as vectors in , the two are not collinear. The lattice generated by and is
This lattice is also sometimes denoted as to make clear that it depends on and It is also sometimes denoted by or or simply by The two generators and are called the lattice basis. The parallelogram with vertices is called the fundamental parallelogram.
While a fundamental pair generates a lattice, a lattice does not have any unique fundamental pair; in fact, an infinite number of fundamental pairs correspond to the same lattice.
Algebraic properties
A number of properties, listed below, can be seen.
Equivalence
Two pairs of complex numbers and are called equivalent if they generate the same lattice: that is, if
No interior points
The fundamental parallelogram contains no further lattice points in its interior or boundary. Conversely, any pair of lattice points with this property constitute a fundamental pair, and furthermore, they generate the same lattice.
Modular symmetry
Two pairs and are equivalent if and only if there exists a 2 × 2 matrix with integer entries and and determinant such that
The abelian group maps the complex plane into the fundamental parallelogram. That is, every point can be written as for integers with a point in the fundamental parallelogram.
Since this mapping identifies opposite sides of the parallelogram as being the same, the fundamental parallelogram has the topology of a torus. Equivalently, one says that the quotient manifold is a torus.
Fundamental region
Define to be the half-period ratio. Then the lattice basis can always be chosen so that lies in a special region, called the fundamental domain. Alternately, there always exists an element of the projective special linear group that maps a lattice basis to another basis so that lies in the fundamental domain.
The fundamental domain is given by the set which is composed of a set plus a part of the boundary of :
The fundamental domain is then built by adding the boundary on the left plus half the arc on the bottom:
Three cases pertain:
If and , then there are exactly two lattice bases with the same in the fundamental region: and
If , then four lattice bases have the same : the above two , and ,
If , then there are six lattice bases with the same :, , and their negatives.
In the closure of the fundamental domain: and
See also
A number of alternative notations for the lattice and for the fundamental pair exist, and are often used in its place. See, for example, the articles on the nome, elliptic modulus, quarter period and half-period ratio.