Point group


In geometry, a point group is a group of geometric symmetries that keep at least one point fixed. Point groups can exist in a Euclidean space with any dimension, and every point group in dimension d is a subgroup of the orthogonal group O. Point groups can be realized as sets of orthogonal matrices M that transform point x into point y:
where the origin is the fixed point. Point-group elements can either be rotations or else reflections, or improper rotations.
Discrete point groups in more than one dimension come in infinite families, but from the crystallographic restriction theorem and one of Bieberbach's theorems, each number of dimensions has only a finite number of point groups that are symmetric over some lattice or grid with that number. These are the crystallographic point groups.

Chiral and achiral point groups, reflection groups

Point groups can be classified into chiral groups and achiral groups.
The chiral groups are subgroups of the special orthogonal group SO: they contain only orientation-preserving orthogonal transformations, i.e., those of determinant +1. The achiral groups contain also transformations of determinant −1. In an achiral group, the orientation-preserving transformations form a subgroup of index 2.
Finite Coxeter groups or reflection groups are those point groups that are generated purely by a set of reflectional mirrors passing through the same point. A rank n Coxeter group has n mirrors and is represented by a Coxeter-Dynkin diagram. Coxeter notation offers a bracketed notation equivalent to the Coxeter diagram, with markup symbols for rotational and other subsymmetry point groups. Reflection groups are necessarily achiral.

List of point groups

One dimension

There are only two one-dimensional point groups, the identity group and the reflection group.
GroupCoxeterCoxeter diagramOrderDescription
C1+1Identity
D12Reflection group

Two dimensions

, sometimes called rosette groups.
They come in two infinite families:
  1. Cyclic groups Cn of n-fold rotation groups
  2. Dihedral groups Dn of n-fold rotation and reflection groups
Applying the crystallographic restriction theorem restricts n to values 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 for both families, yielding 10 groups.
GroupIntlOrbifoldCoxeterOrderDescription
Cnnn•+nCyclic: n-fold rotations. Abstract group Zn, the group of integers under addition modulo n.
Dnnm*n•2nDihedral: cyclic with reflections. Abstract group Dihn, the dihedral group.

The subset of pure reflectional point groups, defined by 1 or 2 mirrors, can also be given by their Coxeter group and related polygons. These include 5 crystallographic groups. The symmetry of the reflectional groups can be doubled by an isomorphism, mapping both mirrors onto each other by a bisecting mirror, doubling the symmetry order.

Three dimensions

, sometimes called molecular point groups after their wide use in studying the symmetries of small molecules.
They come in 7 infinite families of axial or prismatic groups, and 7 additional polyhedral or Platonic groups. In Schönflies notation,*
Applying the crystallographic restriction theorem to these groups yields 32 Crystallographic point groups.
C1v
Order 2
C2v
Order 4
C3v
Order 6
C4v
Order 8
C5v
Order 10
C6v
Order 12
...
-
D1h
Order 4
D2h
Order 8
D3h
Order 12
D4h
Order 16
D5h
Order 20
D6h
Order 24
...
-
Td
Order 24
Oh
Order 48
Ih
Order 120
----
----

Reflection groups

The reflection point groups, defined by 1 to 3 mirror planes, can also be given by their Coxeter group and related polyhedra. The group can be doubled, written as, mapping the first and last mirrors onto each other, doubling the symmetry to 48, and isomorphic to the group.

Four dimensions

The four-dimensional point groups are listed in Conway and Smith, Section 4, Tables 4.1-4.3.
The following list gives the four-dimensional reflection groups. Each group is specified as a Coxeter group, and like the polyhedral groups of 3D, it can be named by its related convex regular 4-polytope. Related pure rotational groups exist for each with half the order, and can be represented by the bracket Coxeter notation with a '+' exponent, for example + has three 3-fold gyration points and symmetry order 60. Front-back symmetric groups like and can be doubled, shown as double brackets in Coxeter's notation, for example with its order doubled to 240.

Five dimensions

The following table gives the five-dimensional reflection groups, by listing them as Coxeter groups. Related chiral groups exist for each with half the order, and can be represented by the bracket Coxeter notation with a '+' exponent, for example + has four 3-fold gyration points and symmetry order 360.

Six dimensions

The following table gives the six-dimensional reflection groups, by listing them as Coxeter groups. Related pure rotational groups exist for each with half the order, and can be represented by the bracket Coxeter notation with a '+' exponent, for example + has five 3-fold gyration points and symmetry order 2520.

Seven dimensions

The following table gives the seven-dimensional reflection groups, by listing them as Coxeter groups. Related chiral groups exist for each with half the order, defined by an even number of reflections, and can be represented by the bracket Coxeter notation with a '+' exponent, for example + has six 3-fold gyration points and symmetry order 20160.

Eight dimensions

The following table gives the eight-dimensional reflection groups, by listing them as Coxeter groups. Related chiral groups exist for each with half the order, defined by an even number of reflections, and can be represented by the bracket Coxeter notation with a '+' exponent, for example + has seven 3-fold gyration points and symmetry order 181440.
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