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The Orthocentric Simplex in Space of Three and Higher Dimensions*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2016

Extract

By a simplex is meant the figure in general flat space of which the triangle and tetrahedron are examples. In space of n dimensions the simplex has (n + 1) vertices and (n + 1) faces, each face consisting of a prime, i.e. a space of (n - 1) dimensions, containing n of the vertices and hence itself a simplex in (n - 1)-dimensional space. There is a general likeness between the triangle and simplexes of higher order, but this is marred by the fact that, in general, a simplex does not possess an orthocentre.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1935

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Footnotes

*

A paper read at the Annual Meeting of the Mathematical Association, 8th January, 1935.

References

* A paper read at the Annual Meeting of the Mathematical Association, 8th January, 1935.