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PROFESSOR: Any questions before
I obliterate all this

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lovely geometry?

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00:00:19,100 --> 00:00:20,120
No.

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OK.

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00:00:20,410 --> 00:00:22,910
We handled them during
intermission I guess.

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00:00:22,910 --> 00:00:27,370
Let me do a couple more plane
groups just very quickly to

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show you how they come out
without going through all of

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the steps, because I think we've
seen now what one has to

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do to derive these.

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00:00:35,520 --> 00:00:37,050
There are two that are left.

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One is a threefold axis, and
if that's all the symmetry

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00:00:42,140 --> 00:00:46,210
we've put into the lattice,
we're combining a threefold

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rotation axis with a primitive
lattice, and we know that this

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has to be hexagonal net.

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Because from our depth of
experience, we know that is

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the shape of a lattice that is
demanded by a threefold axis.

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It has two translations, T1,
that are identical in length.

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And this angle between them
is exactly 120 degrees.

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That's what we saw a threefold
access require.

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So now what we are doing is
putting in a threefold axis at

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one lattice point, and this
means we are adding the

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operations A 2 pi over 3.

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A minus 2 pi over 3.

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I'll choose to define a 120
degree rotation that way, and

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the operation A 2 pi, which is
the identity operations.

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So I'm adding three
operations.

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Putting the threefold axis in
at all these locations.

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They will all be translationally
equivalent.

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The pattern of this particular
plane group is going to be the

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pattern of a threefold axis.

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And so there will be one motif
here, 120 degrees away.

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There will be a--

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sorry to wipe out those
operations--

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120 degrees.

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There'll be another object
located here.

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And 120 degrees again,
there will be another

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object located here.

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So these guys will fall
at the corner of

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an equilateral triangle.

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And the same will be at the
other corners of the net, and

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that, as I've said before,
is the pattern

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of that plane group.

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And that's a plane group
that we would call P3.

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Primitive lattice that has to
be hexagonal, and what we've

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added to it is a
threefold axis.

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OK, let me down here just
indicate the combinations that

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we would do.

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And I could do it up on top,
but I can work with this

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translation as well, which is
easier to reach at this late

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00:03:04,210 --> 00:03:05,650
hour in the afternoon.

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Let me combine A 2 pi over 3
with this translation here.

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And that says we have to get
an operation B 2 pi over 3.

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That is located at the original
translation T times

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the cotangent of 1/2
of 2 pi over 3.

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And that's at 1/2 of the
cotangent of 60 degrees.

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And this turns out not to be any
nice neat number like 0 or

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1/2, but if you evaluate what
the distance up along the

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perpendicular bisector is by
this amount, where you come

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out is right in the center
of this triangle.

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Trust me.

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A little bit of trigonometry
will let you

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convince yourself of that.

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So if I rotate 120 degrees.

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Bring this one to this one,
and then translate over to

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here, the way the first one and
the second one are related

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is by a 120 degree rotation
about the

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center of this triangle.

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If I combine the operation A
minus 2 pi over 3, with this

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translation, I go down a
distance x of minus this

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amount and that puts me in the
middle of the triangle that is

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directly below.

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And I can move that back up.

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And now I have all the
operations of a threefold axis

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about this location.

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I can do the same thing with the
threefold axis at another

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lattice point.

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Another thing I could
do is to just

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rotate this by 120 degrees.

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And by either route, you
find there must be a

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threefold axis here.

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00:05:09,370 --> 00:05:12,680
Notice that these threefold
axes will once again, as

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advertised, simply take things
that are at the different

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00:05:18,490 --> 00:05:20,210
corners of the cell.

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00:05:20,210 --> 00:05:24,590
For example, this threefold axis
will tell you how this

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motif is related to this one
is related to this one.

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And so it goes through the other
threefold axes as well.

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This threefold axis will tell
you this one is related.

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No, I don't want
to draw it in.

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So this is P3, a pair of
threefold axes in the centers

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00:05:45,500 --> 00:05:49,120
of the triangle, and another one
at the corner of the cell.

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00:05:52,620 --> 00:05:56,030
And now I am going to do the
remaining combination of a

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rotation axis with a lattice, so
quickly, and it's going to

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take your breath away.

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00:06:03,650 --> 00:06:06,480
And that is seemingly the
most difficult and

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complex one of all.

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This would be P6.

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00:06:16,490 --> 00:06:19,860
Sixfold axis plus a
primitive lattice.

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00:06:19,860 --> 00:06:23,010
And we know it also has
to be hexagonal.

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And that will be called P6.

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What we're adding to the lattice
is a sixfold axis.

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00:06:36,500 --> 00:06:39,490
And now what I'm going to do
as a shortcut is to say a

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sixfold axis also contains
all the operations

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00:06:44,340 --> 00:06:45,730
of a threefold axis.

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So I can take P3 and drop it
right on top of P6, and that's

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going to give me threefold
axes here.

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Sixfold axis not only contains
2 pi over 6 and 2 pi over 3,

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it also contains the operation
2 pi over 2.

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This is the operation of a
twofold axis, and that says I

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have to, in addition to the two
full rotation that sits

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here get twofold rotations in
the middle of every one of the

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translations T2.

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So actually, this is going to
be P2 superimposed on P3.

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And that's going to give me
these twofold axis and this

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threefold axis.

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And the only thing I have to do
is to show you what A 2 pi

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over 6 combined with
one of these

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translations is going to do.

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What is A 2 pi over 6 combined
with this translation?

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And it's going to be new
operation B 2 pi over 6, and

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it's going to be located at 1/2
of T times the cotangent

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of 1/2 of 60 degrees, cotangent
of 30 degrees.

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And the cotangent of
30 degrees is 2.

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So this is going
to be at 1/2--

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no, what do I want to say?

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This is 30 degrees.

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This is one.

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This is two.

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Cotangent of 30 degrees is this
over this, and that is--

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no that's one.

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AUDIENCE: It's 2 pi
[? squared 3. ?]

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PROFESSOR: Yeah.

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OK, that's right.

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So actually, what that does is
to say the sixfold axis sits

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right up here.

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So I don't get any new sixfold
axis rotation of 60 degrees

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here, followed by translation
is the same as 60 degrees

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about here.

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So this is P6, and there is a
lot of pure rotation axes

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combined with lattices.

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We've got P1, P2,
P3, P4, and P6.

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00:09:06,310 --> 00:09:08,770
Now, what I will do eventually,
when we're all

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done here, the plane groups are
not derived in any book or

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set of tables that
I am aware of.

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And next time, you will get
some notes that do this in

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very slow motion fashion
and give you all

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the individual steps.

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But the international tables
does give you diagrams of the

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resulting plane groups, very
nice carefully done figures

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00:09:38,160 --> 00:09:40,830
along with the representative
arrangement of motifs that

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they generate.

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00:09:43,160 --> 00:09:44,620
But we're not done yet.

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We have not let mirror planes
enter the picture.

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And so unless there is
dissension or debate, I'd like

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to consider what happens when we
take a mirror plane, and we

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00:10:02,350 --> 00:10:07,450
can combine that with two
different kinds of lattices, a

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primitive rectangular net or
a centered rectangular net,

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which is called C. And in order
to do that, we need yet

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00:10:21,250 --> 00:10:23,340
another combination theorem.

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00:10:29,510 --> 00:10:36,280
Here are the lattice points,
and let me first derive the

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00:10:36,280 --> 00:10:39,860
plane group that is called PM.

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00:10:39,860 --> 00:10:43,040
And what I'll do
is to put the--

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00:10:43,040 --> 00:10:48,050
let me use a squiggly line here,
not because I'm excited

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or nervous about this, but just
to distinguish it from

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the edges of the cell.

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So here is the operation
sigma.

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00:10:54,760 --> 00:10:59,080
The pattern that is going to
be displayed by the plane

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00:10:59,080 --> 00:11:02,670
group is once again just the
pattern produced by a mirror

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00:11:02,670 --> 00:11:04,460
plane hung at every
lattice point.

169
00:11:07,050 --> 00:11:09,520
But now we need a theorem.

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00:11:09,520 --> 00:11:15,320
What we have here is the
operation of reflection,

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followed by a translation that
is perpendicular to the locus

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of the reflection line.

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00:11:23,330 --> 00:11:26,700
And we will ask what is that?

174
00:11:30,610 --> 00:11:33,580
Again, you get the answer by
just looking at once and for

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00:11:33,580 --> 00:11:36,050
all, and say, if here is
a first one and it is

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00:11:36,050 --> 00:11:40,020
right-handed, and I reflect it
to one number to a second one,

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00:11:40,020 --> 00:11:43,630
number two, which is
left-handed, and then move

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00:11:43,630 --> 00:11:48,390
that by translation here to get
number three, which stays

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00:11:48,390 --> 00:11:51,120
left-handed if I move
by translation.

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00:11:51,120 --> 00:11:55,160
And ask now how was one
related to three.

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The chirality is changed.

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Reflection is the only thing
available to us, and lo and

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00:12:00,970 --> 00:12:05,250
behold, if I say there is a new
mirror plane here, that

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00:12:05,250 --> 00:12:07,800
tells me how this is related
to this, and this one is

185
00:12:07,800 --> 00:12:08,890
related to this one.

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00:12:08,890 --> 00:12:15,270
And this to this and this to
this, so the answer to this

187
00:12:15,270 --> 00:12:18,780
question is that a reflection
combined with a perpendicular

188
00:12:18,780 --> 00:12:21,850
translation is a new reflection
operation sigma

189
00:12:21,850 --> 00:12:27,690
prime that is located at a
distance removed from the

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00:12:27,690 --> 00:12:33,230
first by 1/2 of that
perpendicular translation.

191
00:12:33,230 --> 00:12:35,530
And again, it's a plane old
mirror plane just like the

192
00:12:35,530 --> 00:12:38,950
first one, but notice that the
disposition of objects

193
00:12:38,950 --> 00:12:42,230
relative to the mirror plane in
the center of the cell is

194
00:12:42,230 --> 00:12:45,530
quite distinct from the
disposition of objects

195
00:12:45,530 --> 00:12:48,000
relative to the first mirror
plane, so this is a second

196
00:12:48,000 --> 00:12:48,960
mirror plane.

197
00:12:48,960 --> 00:12:56,220
It is an independent mirror
plane from the first.

198
00:12:56,220 --> 00:13:00,710
So that is plane group PM.

199
00:13:00,710 --> 00:13:03,360
If there's symmetry in this
business, you might ask is

200
00:13:03,360 --> 00:13:07,080
there a plane group AM?

201
00:13:07,080 --> 00:13:09,180
The answer is yes in
three dimensions.

202
00:13:09,180 --> 00:13:14,070
There is a space group, PM, and
there's a space group AM.

203
00:13:14,070 --> 00:13:16,960
So there's AM and PM, and there
is symmetry, and all is

204
00:13:16,960 --> 00:13:18,210
well in the universe.

205
00:13:20,880 --> 00:13:23,380
OK, we're making great
progress here.

206
00:13:23,380 --> 00:13:30,540
And we'll be fairly well along
before we have to bring things

207
00:13:30,540 --> 00:13:32,230
to a close.

208
00:13:32,230 --> 00:13:34,490
Let's do the second addition
that's possible

209
00:13:34,490 --> 00:13:37,440
with a mirror plane.

210
00:13:37,440 --> 00:13:42,120
And that is to take a reflection
operation and add

211
00:13:42,120 --> 00:13:46,360
it to the translations that
are present in a centered

212
00:13:46,360 --> 00:13:47,610
rectangular net.

213
00:13:49,720 --> 00:13:54,560
We've already done all the work
for PM, so we can use

214
00:13:54,560 --> 00:13:57,410
that as a starting point.

215
00:13:57,410 --> 00:14:00,880
The pattern of this plane group
is going to look like a

216
00:14:00,880 --> 00:14:04,510
pair of objects related
by reflection.

217
00:14:04,510 --> 00:14:07,850
But now, we'll have an extra
pair hung at the centered

218
00:14:07,850 --> 00:14:09,100
lattice point as well.

219
00:14:13,280 --> 00:14:17,230
And the first thing we can note
is that this mirror plane

220
00:14:17,230 --> 00:14:19,980
is no longer independent
of the first one.

221
00:14:30,100 --> 00:14:33,990
What goes on at this mirror
plane is something that's

222
00:14:33,990 --> 00:14:37,490
related to what happens at the
origin lattice point and

223
00:14:37,490 --> 00:14:40,630
mirror plane, and therefore,
these two mirror planes are

224
00:14:40,630 --> 00:14:42,670
going to do the same thing.

225
00:14:42,670 --> 00:14:48,660
The pattern of this plane group,
we've taken a mirror

226
00:14:48,660 --> 00:14:53,800
plane and added it to a centered
rectangular net.

227
00:14:53,800 --> 00:14:57,540
This is called a C lattice,
standing for centered.

228
00:14:57,540 --> 00:15:01,850
And correspondingly,
the symbol for this

229
00:15:01,850 --> 00:15:03,100
plane group is CM.

230
00:15:06,790 --> 00:15:08,710
We know how this one is
related to this one.

231
00:15:08,710 --> 00:15:10,440
This one related to this one.

232
00:15:10,440 --> 00:15:14,700
And now, we've got something
of a problem.

233
00:15:14,700 --> 00:15:18,670
All of these motifs
are equivalent.

234
00:15:18,670 --> 00:15:22,140
How is this one related
to this one?

235
00:15:25,520 --> 00:15:29,890
Or in more general terms, what
we're asking is suppose I have

236
00:15:29,890 --> 00:15:35,900
a reflection operation sigma,
and I add the translation not

237
00:15:35,900 --> 00:15:44,290
at right angles to it, as I
did here, but place the

238
00:15:44,290 --> 00:15:47,050
translation at an angle
with respect to

239
00:15:47,050 --> 00:15:50,150
the reflection plane.

240
00:15:50,150 --> 00:15:53,870
So what we're going to do is to
take a first motif that's

241
00:15:53,870 --> 00:15:59,460
right-handed, reflect it to
a second one, which is

242
00:15:59,460 --> 00:16:00,790
left-handed.

243
00:16:00,790 --> 00:16:05,150
And then slide it along so that
it sits up in the same

244
00:16:05,150 --> 00:16:09,820
position relative to this
centered lattice point.

245
00:16:09,820 --> 00:16:12,580
So here's number three,
translation leaves it

246
00:16:12,580 --> 00:16:13,830
left-handed.

247
00:16:16,140 --> 00:16:22,020
So I've taken the operation of
reflection combined it with a

248
00:16:22,020 --> 00:16:27,540
translation that has a
perpendicular component plus a

249
00:16:27,540 --> 00:16:30,950
parallel component,
perpendicular and parallel

250
00:16:30,950 --> 00:16:34,220
meaning the orientation of these
two components of the

251
00:16:34,220 --> 00:16:39,140
translation relative to the
reflection operation.

252
00:16:39,140 --> 00:16:43,630
Anybody want to hazard a guess
on how that first one is

253
00:16:43,630 --> 00:16:47,420
related to the third one?

254
00:16:47,420 --> 00:16:48,630
Number one is right-handed.

255
00:16:48,630 --> 00:16:50,710
Number two is left-handed,
so it's got to

256
00:16:50,710 --> 00:16:51,960
be reflection, right?

257
00:16:56,490 --> 00:17:02,430
If I put a reflection plane in
here, this one ought to be

258
00:17:02,430 --> 00:17:04,140
tilted like this.

259
00:17:04,140 --> 00:17:06,960
That's not going
to do the job.

260
00:17:06,960 --> 00:17:07,910
Anybody got any idea?

261
00:17:07,910 --> 00:17:08,356
Yeah.

262
00:17:08,356 --> 00:17:10,589
AUDIENCE: What is that,
T, T1 [INAUDIBLE]?

263
00:17:10,589 --> 00:17:10,939
PROFESSOR: OK.

264
00:17:10,939 --> 00:17:13,869
T parallel plus T perpendicular
means it's a

265
00:17:13,869 --> 00:17:15,780
component of this translation.

266
00:17:15,780 --> 00:17:19,900
This is T. This has a part T
perpendicular, and it has a

267
00:17:19,900 --> 00:17:23,562
part T parallel relative to
the initial mirror plane.

268
00:17:33,230 --> 00:17:37,930
My friends, we have just
stumbled headlong over a new

269
00:17:37,930 --> 00:17:41,910
type of symmetry operation,
which we have discovered upon

270
00:17:41,910 --> 00:17:44,520
making this combination
of mirror plane

271
00:17:44,520 --> 00:17:46,320
with a centered lattice.

272
00:17:46,320 --> 00:17:49,900
And it's come up to smack us
rudely in the face even though

273
00:17:49,900 --> 00:17:51,850
we may not have been
clever enough to

274
00:17:51,850 --> 00:17:53,920
think of it in advance.

275
00:17:53,920 --> 00:17:57,930
This is a new type of operation,
and it is an

276
00:17:57,930 --> 00:18:01,760
operation that cannot be reduced
to one of the simple

277
00:18:01,760 --> 00:18:04,140
operations that we've
defined so far.

278
00:18:04,140 --> 00:18:08,050
You've got to take two steps
to get from number one to

279
00:18:08,050 --> 00:18:10,600
number three.

280
00:18:10,600 --> 00:18:16,350
The way you can do it is to
reflect along a locus that is

281
00:18:16,350 --> 00:18:20,000
one half of the way along the
perpendicular part of the

282
00:18:20,000 --> 00:18:24,620
translation, exactly the same
location as we found the

283
00:18:24,620 --> 00:18:28,660
symmetry plane positioned when
the translation was normal to

284
00:18:28,660 --> 00:18:30,460
the first mirror plane.

285
00:18:30,460 --> 00:18:34,330
But yet we can't put the
object down yet in the

286
00:18:34,330 --> 00:18:39,420
position that would be produced
by translation,

287
00:18:39,420 --> 00:18:42,150
because our translation is
inclined to the mirror plane.

288
00:18:42,150 --> 00:18:45,470
So I've got to take
a second step.

289
00:18:45,470 --> 00:18:46,340
Reflect.

290
00:18:46,340 --> 00:18:47,900
Don't yet put it down yet.

291
00:18:47,900 --> 00:18:50,990
Before you put it down, slide
it up parallel to the mirror

292
00:18:50,990 --> 00:18:55,710
plane by an amount that's
equal to the part of the

293
00:18:55,710 --> 00:18:58,940
translation that is parallel
to the mirror plane.

294
00:18:58,940 --> 00:19:01,690
So to summarize this before
all these words get too

295
00:19:01,690 --> 00:19:06,300
confusing, I'm saying that a
reflection operation combined

296
00:19:06,300 --> 00:19:09,900
with a general translation
that has a perpendicular

297
00:19:09,900 --> 00:19:12,590
component in the parallel
component relative to the

298
00:19:12,590 --> 00:19:16,550
locus of reflection is going to
be a new operation, which

299
00:19:16,550 --> 00:19:20,150
I'll write as sigma tau,
a reflection part and a

300
00:19:20,150 --> 00:19:24,630
translation tau that is parallel
to the mirror plane,

301
00:19:24,630 --> 00:19:28,690
and tau is equal to the part
of the translation that is

302
00:19:28,690 --> 00:19:32,580
parallel to the mirror plane.

303
00:19:37,090 --> 00:19:38,340
Astounding.

304
00:19:40,140 --> 00:19:43,670
This is a two-step operation
that cannot be described in

305
00:19:43,670 --> 00:19:47,040
terms simpler than saying
do two steps to do it.

306
00:19:47,040 --> 00:19:49,510
And we'll see as we go along,
particularly into a

307
00:19:49,510 --> 00:19:52,310
three-dimensional space, that
there are other two-step

308
00:19:52,310 --> 00:19:54,610
operations as well.

309
00:19:54,610 --> 00:19:59,520
Now you're all familiar with a
pattern like this, because in

310
00:19:59,520 --> 00:20:02,810
very short order when New
England's winter descends upon

311
00:20:02,810 --> 00:20:06,930
us, as you go slogging along
from your room into the

312
00:20:06,930 --> 00:20:11,080
Institute, your footprints will
make a pattern like that

313
00:20:11,080 --> 00:20:12,330
in the snow.

314
00:20:15,500 --> 00:20:17,280
Exactly what we've got here.

315
00:20:17,280 --> 00:20:20,110
Reflect across and slide.

316
00:20:20,110 --> 00:20:22,500
Reflect across and slide.

317
00:20:22,500 --> 00:20:26,250
Reflect across and slide,
and this is the

318
00:20:26,250 --> 00:20:29,250
glide component tau.

319
00:20:29,250 --> 00:20:33,620
And this is an operation that
is called a glide plane.

320
00:20:36,742 --> 00:20:39,490
And it's a new type of
symmetry operation.

321
00:20:39,490 --> 00:20:41,790
It can only exist in a
pattern, which has

322
00:20:41,790 --> 00:20:44,600
translational periodicity.

323
00:20:44,600 --> 00:20:47,200
And if we were not clever enough
to invent it, we would

324
00:20:47,200 --> 00:20:51,370
see it as soon as we combined a
mirror plane with a lattice

325
00:20:51,370 --> 00:20:54,340
that was non-primitive and had
a translation parallel to it.

326
00:20:54,340 --> 00:20:57,810
So it's a very, very
descriptive

327
00:20:57,810 --> 00:20:59,900
name, the glide plane.

328
00:20:59,900 --> 00:21:04,990
Reflect and glide, reflect and
glide, reflect and glide.

329
00:21:04,990 --> 00:21:07,530
It sounds like something you'd
be doing in the Arthur Murray

330
00:21:07,530 --> 00:21:09,500
dance studio, very melodious.

331
00:21:09,500 --> 00:21:12,430
Reflect and glide, reflect
and glide.

332
00:21:12,430 --> 00:21:13,680
It's a nice operation.

333
00:21:19,730 --> 00:21:24,470
All right, so what has happened
then when we add a

334
00:21:24,470 --> 00:21:29,320
mirror plane to a centered
rectangular net is that we get

335
00:21:29,320 --> 00:21:35,880
a new operation coming in,
something completely new.

336
00:21:35,880 --> 00:21:39,440
We've got a symbol to represent
an individual

337
00:21:39,440 --> 00:21:42,350
operation, sigma the symbol
for reflection with a

338
00:21:42,350 --> 00:21:44,670
subscript tau.

339
00:21:44,670 --> 00:21:50,550
And the pattern we've already
drawn, but let's do it again

340
00:21:50,550 --> 00:21:53,670
in a tidy fashion.

341
00:21:53,670 --> 00:21:56,820
Exactly as advertised, the pair
of objects related by

342
00:21:56,820 --> 00:22:00,020
reflection hung at every
lattice point of-- holy

343
00:22:00,020 --> 00:22:00,610
mackerel, look at this.

344
00:22:00,610 --> 00:22:02,450
That would give you
the willies.

345
00:22:02,450 --> 00:22:06,340
That's the nature
of the motif.

346
00:22:06,340 --> 00:22:08,210
Get that out of there.

347
00:22:08,210 --> 00:22:10,175
Mirror planes going through
the lattice points.

348
00:22:13,120 --> 00:22:15,460
Glide planes halfway
in between.

349
00:22:19,390 --> 00:22:25,180
The mirror lines and the glide
planes tell us how things on

350
00:22:25,180 --> 00:22:28,400
the right side, for example,
of the lattice point are

351
00:22:28,400 --> 00:22:34,450
related to the motif of opposite
chirality on the

352
00:22:34,450 --> 00:22:36,625
left-hand side of the centered
lattice point.

353
00:22:39,320 --> 00:22:43,290
And this is a plane group
that is called CM.

354
00:22:56,540 --> 00:22:57,540
AUDIENCE: Question.

355
00:22:57,540 --> 00:22:58,440
PROFESSOR: Yes, sir.

356
00:22:58,440 --> 00:23:01,179
AUDIENCE: How can we just define
a new operation that's

357
00:23:01,179 --> 00:23:01,926
a two-step.

358
00:23:01,926 --> 00:23:04,914
Seems like we could do this
forever, define two steps of

359
00:23:04,914 --> 00:23:07,260
any new operation, like you
said, with two steps.

360
00:23:07,260 --> 00:23:08,200
PROFESSOR: That's
a good question.

361
00:23:08,200 --> 00:23:11,330
We found this, because we
tripped headlong over it.

362
00:23:11,330 --> 00:23:13,310
And we say OK, there it is.

363
00:23:13,310 --> 00:23:14,510
We've got to deal with it.

364
00:23:14,510 --> 00:23:15,200
But you're right.

365
00:23:15,200 --> 00:23:21,190
How do you know that rotating
once reflecting, and then

366
00:23:21,190 --> 00:23:24,860
turning end over end three times
is not a new operation

367
00:23:24,860 --> 00:23:28,310
that cannot be decomposed, is
the word that's used for it,

368
00:23:28,310 --> 00:23:31,240
into something simpler?

369
00:23:31,240 --> 00:23:33,630
The answer is you've
got to try it.

370
00:23:33,630 --> 00:23:37,810
If they're there, when we make
these combinations of a

371
00:23:37,810 --> 00:23:41,240
symmetry operation, and now the
symmetry operation can be

372
00:23:41,240 --> 00:23:44,090
a two-step symmetry operation,
now that we've discovered

373
00:23:44,090 --> 00:23:47,190
that, combine that with lattice
and with rotation and

374
00:23:47,190 --> 00:23:51,320
with reflection, and ask what
is the relation between the

375
00:23:51,320 --> 00:23:54,760
motif at the beginning and
the motif at the end.

376
00:23:54,760 --> 00:23:59,230
If you can't describe it any
more simply other than a hop,

377
00:23:59,230 --> 00:24:02,590
skip and jump, you've got to
introduce the hop, skip, and

378
00:24:02,590 --> 00:24:05,420
jump as an element that
goes into the

379
00:24:05,420 --> 00:24:07,150
derivation of these groups.

380
00:24:07,150 --> 00:24:10,830
Now before you get concerned and
fill out an add/drop card,

381
00:24:10,830 --> 00:24:15,100
I have to reassure you that
there are a couple of two-step

382
00:24:15,100 --> 00:24:18,800
operations that we have yet to
discover, but there are no

383
00:24:18,800 --> 00:24:20,710
three-step operations
that are necessary.

384
00:24:23,686 --> 00:24:24,590
Whew.

385
00:24:24,590 --> 00:24:26,574
Feel better now, don't you?

386
00:24:26,574 --> 00:24:28,035
AUDIENCE: I was just going to
say it's kind of arbitrary,

387
00:24:28,035 --> 00:24:30,957
because you have a and b, you're
just applying the third

388
00:24:30,957 --> 00:24:31,444
[INAUDIBLE]

389
00:24:31,444 --> 00:24:35,840
T sub a and b, [INAUDIBLE]
trivial multiplication tables.

390
00:24:35,840 --> 00:24:37,650
PROFESSOR: Well, actually,
this is

391
00:24:37,650 --> 00:24:39,540
something that is distinct.

392
00:24:39,540 --> 00:24:42,710
I mean here is the group, and
you cannot describe the

393
00:24:42,710 --> 00:24:47,200
relation between everything that
is in this pattern, which

394
00:24:47,200 --> 00:24:50,350
was obtained simply by taking
the operation of reflection--

395
00:24:50,350 --> 00:24:53,060
we know how to peacefully
coexist with that--

396
00:24:53,060 --> 00:24:58,180
and placing that pair of objects
at lattice point of a

397
00:24:58,180 --> 00:24:59,430
centered rectangular net.

398
00:25:01,916 --> 00:25:04,360
So that's nothing
really freaky.

399
00:25:04,360 --> 00:25:08,430
I mean it's a straightforward
addition, but if it's a group,

400
00:25:08,430 --> 00:25:11,650
you have to know when you
combine all the operations

401
00:25:11,650 --> 00:25:15,490
pairwise that it'd be able to
show that these operations are

402
00:25:15,490 --> 00:25:16,820
members of a group.

403
00:25:16,820 --> 00:25:19,560
And the answer in terms of the
language of group theory, if

404
00:25:19,560 --> 00:25:22,770
you combine a reflection with
a translation that has a

405
00:25:22,770 --> 00:25:26,420
component that is parallel to
the reflection plane, then

406
00:25:26,420 --> 00:25:30,970
there is a new operation that
comes up that has to be in the

407
00:25:30,970 --> 00:25:34,660
group multiplication table,
and the operation has a

408
00:25:34,660 --> 00:25:38,910
reflection part and a
translation part.

409
00:25:38,910 --> 00:25:40,100
AUDIENCE: I have a question.

410
00:25:40,100 --> 00:25:40,700
PROFESSOR: Yes.

411
00:25:40,700 --> 00:25:42,785
AUDIENCE: How do we go from the
lower left to the upper

412
00:25:42,785 --> 00:25:44,630
right in one operation?

413
00:25:44,630 --> 00:25:47,350
PROFESSOR: The lower left
to the upper right.

414
00:25:47,350 --> 00:25:51,670
AUDIENCE: No, the upper
right diagonally.

415
00:25:51,670 --> 00:25:57,116
Across the diagonal, the upper
right corner of the square.

416
00:25:57,116 --> 00:25:58,532
PROFESSOR: Upper right here?

417
00:25:58,532 --> 00:25:59,948
AUDIENCE: Yeah.

418
00:25:59,948 --> 00:26:01,943
And the left-handed
guide below that.

419
00:26:01,943 --> 00:26:03,470
PROFESSOR: The left-handed
guide below.

420
00:26:03,470 --> 00:26:04,220
AUDIENCE: No.

421
00:26:04,220 --> 00:26:06,090
Down there.

422
00:26:06,090 --> 00:26:07,272
PROFESSOR: Where
is down there?

423
00:26:07,272 --> 00:26:08,565
AUDIENCE: The lowest
edge of the--

424
00:26:08,565 --> 00:26:09,430
PROFESSOR: Down here?

425
00:26:09,430 --> 00:26:09,820
AUDIENCE: Yeah.

426
00:26:09,820 --> 00:26:10,210
PROFESSOR: OK.

427
00:26:10,210 --> 00:26:11,655
From this one to this one?

428
00:26:11,655 --> 00:26:12,905
AUDIENCE: Yeah.

429
00:26:22,630 --> 00:26:23,410
PROFESSOR: OK.

430
00:26:23,410 --> 00:26:26,350
What I can say is--

431
00:26:26,350 --> 00:26:29,670
may sound like I'm slipping
off the hook too easily--

432
00:26:29,670 --> 00:26:33,150
we said that we really only want
to consider operations

433
00:26:33,150 --> 00:26:37,030
that terminate within the cell,
and the way I get from

434
00:26:37,030 --> 00:26:42,430
here to here is to reflect and
then translate up by the

435
00:26:42,430 --> 00:26:43,670
diagonal translation.

436
00:26:43,670 --> 00:26:46,950
So that's something that
lies outside the cell.

437
00:26:46,950 --> 00:26:49,470
So I can always knock off
an integral number of

438
00:26:49,470 --> 00:26:52,470
translations or add on
an integral number of

439
00:26:52,470 --> 00:26:58,026
translations to any mapping
transformation, modulo T. OK?

440
00:26:58,026 --> 00:26:59,994
AUDIENCE: But surely, if you've
done, one operation

441
00:26:59,994 --> 00:27:02,460
then it's [INAUDIBLE]?

442
00:27:02,460 --> 00:27:03,383
PROFESSOR: From here to here?

443
00:27:03,383 --> 00:27:04,940
No, not necessarily.

444
00:27:04,940 --> 00:27:10,840
If I give you a very simple
pattern and plane group P1,

445
00:27:10,840 --> 00:27:15,310
and you ask how do I get from
this one here to this one that

446
00:27:15,310 --> 00:27:20,175
sits up here?

447
00:27:20,175 --> 00:27:24,150
If it's outside the cell, I've
got to go translation that's

448
00:27:24,150 --> 00:27:24,940
outside the cell.

449
00:27:24,940 --> 00:27:26,770
But it's not any new
translation or

450
00:27:26,770 --> 00:27:30,000
any new sort of operation.

451
00:27:30,000 --> 00:27:32,300
This is sort of in the
same category.

452
00:27:32,300 --> 00:27:33,030
Yeah.

453
00:27:33,030 --> 00:27:34,950
AUDIENCE: You can make
a glide plane in the

454
00:27:34,950 --> 00:27:36,970
center of the cell.

455
00:27:36,970 --> 00:27:38,850
PROFESSOR: Yeah, OK.

456
00:27:38,850 --> 00:27:40,510
Thank you.

457
00:27:40,510 --> 00:27:45,500
There is a glide operation that
goes from here to here

458
00:27:45,500 --> 00:27:49,190
and then translates up by
one full translation.

459
00:27:49,190 --> 00:27:52,650
But a glide operation that
is an integral number of

460
00:27:52,650 --> 00:27:55,990
translations says that
you're dealing with--

461
00:27:55,990 --> 00:28:00,720
there's another object that is
removed by a translation that

462
00:28:00,720 --> 00:28:01,870
is the same thing.

463
00:28:01,870 --> 00:28:05,620
So it is first and that simpler
one that would be

464
00:28:05,620 --> 00:28:08,570
inside of the cell and would
be only the unique sort of

465
00:28:08,570 --> 00:28:11,630
translation you need
to consider.

466
00:28:11,630 --> 00:28:11,980
Thank you.

467
00:28:11,980 --> 00:28:13,020
That's a good question.

468
00:28:13,020 --> 00:28:15,720
That was a good answer
to his question.

469
00:28:15,720 --> 00:28:17,260
In fact, anybody want
to take over?

470
00:28:17,260 --> 00:28:18,127
I didn't do well on that one.

471
00:28:18,127 --> 00:28:19,192
Yeah.

472
00:28:19,192 --> 00:28:20,174
AUDIENCE: I was curious.

473
00:28:20,174 --> 00:28:22,629
Does the glide plane exist maybe
in this case because

474
00:28:22,629 --> 00:28:25,084
we're not using a
primitive cell?

475
00:28:25,084 --> 00:28:29,020
If you were to consider this
[INAUDIBLE] as hexagonal?

476
00:28:29,020 --> 00:28:32,950
PROFESSOR: OK, let me answer
that question by saying that

477
00:28:32,950 --> 00:28:36,370
that's our first encounter
with it.

478
00:28:36,370 --> 00:28:41,230
But now, that it exists, that
is a symmetry element, which

479
00:28:41,230 --> 00:28:46,960
we should consider adding to
lattices in addition to pure

480
00:28:46,960 --> 00:28:48,600
reflection.

481
00:28:48,600 --> 00:28:53,540
So let me proceed now to do
another plane group since we

482
00:28:53,540 --> 00:28:56,766
had discovered the operation
of glide.

483
00:28:56,766 --> 00:29:06,060
And I will take a primitive
rectangular lattice, and I

484
00:29:06,060 --> 00:29:11,565
will now add to the lattice
point, not a mirror plane, but

485
00:29:11,565 --> 00:29:13,136
a glide plane.

486
00:29:13,136 --> 00:29:14,950
OK.

487
00:29:14,950 --> 00:29:18,740
The pattern is going to look
like the pattern of glide,

488
00:29:18,740 --> 00:29:20,950
have things left and right
on either side

489
00:29:20,950 --> 00:29:22,120
of the glide plane.

490
00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:23,370
The same thing here.

491
00:29:27,440 --> 00:29:30,700
And there is the pattern.

492
00:29:30,700 --> 00:29:32,502
This is a pattern that's
called PG.

493
00:29:37,540 --> 00:29:43,880
And what I have to ask is what
is the guide operation sigma

494
00:29:43,880 --> 00:29:47,790
tau combined with, let's say
this translation T1.

495
00:29:50,330 --> 00:30:00,760
And the answer is that if I
reproduce number one to number

496
00:30:00,760 --> 00:30:05,690
two of opposite chirality by the
glide operation sigma tau

497
00:30:05,690 --> 00:30:13,980
and then follow that by T1 the
first and the third will be

498
00:30:13,980 --> 00:30:19,590
related by a new glide operation
sigma tau prime

499
00:30:19,590 --> 00:30:22,510
that's located at half
perpendicular part of the

500
00:30:22,510 --> 00:30:25,180
translation away
from the first.

501
00:30:25,180 --> 00:30:28,800
And that really is a
generalization of this

502
00:30:28,800 --> 00:30:30,910
relation here.

503
00:30:30,910 --> 00:30:38,270
If we make the pure reflection
operation a glide operation,

504
00:30:38,270 --> 00:30:42,390
combine it with a translation
that is perpendicular to it,

505
00:30:42,390 --> 00:30:45,370
it turns out that the net
result is a new glide

506
00:30:45,370 --> 00:30:48,290
operation, sigma tau prime.

507
00:30:48,290 --> 00:30:54,580
The two taus are equal, and this
occurs at one half of the

508
00:30:54,580 --> 00:30:58,200
translation T perpendicular
removed from the first.

509
00:30:58,200 --> 00:31:02,660
And the complete generalization
would be to say

510
00:31:02,660 --> 00:31:06,500
if I have a translation that
has a parallel part and a

511
00:31:06,500 --> 00:31:12,540
perpendicular part relative to
the glide plane, what I will

512
00:31:12,540 --> 00:31:18,950
get is a new glide operation
sigma prime that's located at

513
00:31:18,950 --> 00:31:21,870
1/2 of the perpendicular part
of the translation from the

514
00:31:21,870 --> 00:31:25,190
first, and it will pick up a
glide component that's equal

515
00:31:25,190 --> 00:31:28,490
to the original tau plus the
part of the translation that's

516
00:31:28,490 --> 00:31:31,190
parallel to the glide plane.

517
00:31:31,190 --> 00:31:34,820
So this now is this theorem
involving translation and

518
00:31:34,820 --> 00:31:37,760
reflection type operations
in its most general form.

519
00:31:42,960 --> 00:31:43,330
OK.

520
00:31:43,330 --> 00:31:50,060
So this is a new group called
CM, and it consists of pairs

521
00:31:50,060 --> 00:31:51,310
of objects.

522
00:31:54,740 --> 00:31:55,810
Sorry, we did that earlier.

523
00:31:55,810 --> 00:31:59,180
This is PG, pairs of objects
related by a glide plane, hung

524
00:31:59,180 --> 00:32:03,940
at every lattice point of the
primitive rectangular lattice.

525
00:32:03,940 --> 00:32:05,372
Is there a CG?

526
00:32:12,200 --> 00:32:17,900
Actually, there is not, and let
me show you why, and then

527
00:32:17,900 --> 00:32:20,380
I think we're just about
quitting time.

528
00:32:20,380 --> 00:32:25,070
If there is a centered lattice,
and I hang a glide

529
00:32:25,070 --> 00:32:31,610
plane at the lattice points,
we'll have glide planes in the

530
00:32:31,610 --> 00:32:39,140
locations of PG, the pattern
will look like objects

531
00:32:39,140 --> 00:32:40,390
repeated by glide.

532
00:32:42,780 --> 00:32:46,670
At this lattice point, and now
we're going to have another

533
00:32:46,670 --> 00:32:50,540
object hung at the centered
lattice point, and it's going

534
00:32:50,540 --> 00:32:53,520
to be in positions like this.

535
00:32:53,520 --> 00:33:00,560
Now, you can see just by looking
at the pattern that

536
00:33:00,560 --> 00:33:02,290
there is going to be--

537
00:33:02,290 --> 00:33:05,220
whoops, what did I do here?

538
00:33:05,220 --> 00:33:07,900
I want to move this one up to
here, and I want to move this

539
00:33:07,900 --> 00:33:09,380
one up to here.

540
00:33:09,380 --> 00:33:11,170
This one should be
in this location.

541
00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:20,240
If I look at that pattern, what
I've done is to create

542
00:33:20,240 --> 00:33:23,790
halfway along the--

543
00:33:23,790 --> 00:33:26,530
quarter of the way along
the translation a

544
00:33:26,530 --> 00:33:29,990
pure reflection operation.

545
00:33:29,990 --> 00:33:35,190
And I can find that using
my general theorem.

546
00:33:35,190 --> 00:33:42,160
I have a glide operation,
sigma tau.

547
00:33:42,160 --> 00:33:45,500
I combine with that the centered
translation, which is

548
00:33:45,500 --> 00:33:50,520
1/2 of T1 plus 1/2 of T2.

549
00:33:54,680 --> 00:33:59,200
I've taken 1/2 of T1 plus 1/2
of T2, that's the centering

550
00:33:59,200 --> 00:34:03,846
translation, combined
that with sigma tau.

551
00:34:03,846 --> 00:34:07,060
I'll deftly jump to the side, so
the people against the wall

552
00:34:07,060 --> 00:34:09,110
can see it.

553
00:34:09,110 --> 00:34:12,650
I've taken a glide operation,
combined it with this

554
00:34:12,650 --> 00:34:14,260
translation.

555
00:34:14,260 --> 00:34:20,679
This should be a new reflection
type of operation

556
00:34:20,679 --> 00:34:24,810
that will be located at 1/2 of
the perpendicular part of the

557
00:34:24,810 --> 00:34:32,219
translation, and that's
at 1/2 of 1/2 of T1.

558
00:34:32,219 --> 00:34:37,219
And it will have a glide
component tau prime, which is

559
00:34:37,219 --> 00:34:43,719
the original tau, which
was 1/2 of T2.

560
00:34:43,719 --> 00:34:46,130
And to that we add the
parallel part of the

561
00:34:46,130 --> 00:34:50,110
translation, and that
is 1/2 of T2.

562
00:34:50,110 --> 00:34:55,510
So this is rewritten in slightly
different form, is

563
00:34:55,510 --> 00:35:01,300
simply a new glide plane sigma
prime, which has a glide

564
00:35:01,300 --> 00:35:05,620
component equal to the entire
translation T2 at

565
00:35:05,620 --> 00:35:08,110
1/4 quarter of T1.

566
00:35:08,110 --> 00:35:12,200
And this is the same as a
mirror plane at 1/4 T1.

567
00:35:16,250 --> 00:35:20,030
And this, if we compare
it with CM, is

568
00:35:20,030 --> 00:35:22,600
exactly the same thing.

569
00:35:22,600 --> 00:35:36,400
Identical to CM with an origin
shift of 1/4 T1.

570
00:35:36,400 --> 00:35:41,880
So there is no CG in what
we picked up in terms of

571
00:35:41,880 --> 00:35:50,290
rectangular nets and symmetry
planes is PM, PG, and CN.

572
00:35:50,290 --> 00:35:54,510
So there are three groups
involving orthogonal nets in a

573
00:35:54,510 --> 00:35:55,760
single symmetry plane.

574
00:35:58,510 --> 00:36:03,870
That is a good place
to wrap things up.

575
00:36:03,870 --> 00:36:08,120
And we'll next turn very, very
quickly equipped with a set of

576
00:36:08,120 --> 00:36:11,240
notes, which summarizes the
result, to what happens when

577
00:36:11,240 --> 00:36:16,600
we take two MM and put it into
a rectangular net, and take

578
00:36:16,600 --> 00:36:20,900
two MM and put it into a
centered rectangular net.

579
00:36:20,900 --> 00:36:23,130
And then things get interesting,
because we've got

580
00:36:23,130 --> 00:36:23,720
two planes.

581
00:36:23,720 --> 00:36:25,330
We can make a both
mirror planes.

582
00:36:25,330 --> 00:36:28,150
We can make them both glides, or
make one a mirror plane and

583
00:36:28,150 --> 00:36:29,320
one a glide plane.

584
00:36:29,320 --> 00:36:31,110
So there are three possibilities
with the

585
00:36:31,110 --> 00:36:34,880
addition of two MM to the net.

586
00:36:34,880 --> 00:36:36,850
More than enough for one day.

587
00:36:36,850 --> 00:36:39,330
It's Thursday.

588
00:36:39,330 --> 00:36:41,580
Take the rest of the
week and weekend

589
00:36:41,580 --> 00:36:44,130
off by doing no symmetry.

590
00:36:44,130 --> 00:36:46,840
There's no assignment,
and we'll have at

591
00:36:46,840 --> 00:36:48,090
it again next Tuesday.