On the number of incidences between points and planes in three dimensions
Abstract
We prove an incidence theorem for points and planes in the projective space P3 over any field F, whose characteristic p≠ 2. An incidence is viewed as an intersection along a line of a pair of two-planes from two canonical rulings of the Klein quadric. The Klein quadric can be traversed by a generic hyperplane, yielding a line-line incidence problem in a three-quadric, the Klein image of a regular line complex. This hyperplane can be chosen so that at most two lines meet. Hence, one can apply an algebraic theorem of Guth and Katz, with a constraint involving p if p>0. This yields a bound on the number of incidences between m points and n planes in P3, with m≥ n as O(mn+ m k), where k is the maximum number of collinear planes, provided that n=O(p2) if p>0. Examples show that this bound cannot be improved without additional assumptions. This gives one a vehicle to establish geometric incidence estimates when p>0. For a non-collinear point set S⊂eq F2 and a non-degenerate symmetric or skew-symmetric bilinear form ω, the number of distinct values of ω on pairs of points of S is [(|S|23,p)]. This is also the best known bound over R, where it follows from the Szemer\'edi-Trotter theorem. Also, a set S⊂eq F3, not supported in a single semi-isotropic plane contains a point, from which [(|S|12,p)] distinct distances to other points of S are attained.
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