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Transitive and Co-Transitive Caps
A cap in PG(r,q) is a set of points, no three of which are collinear. A cap
is said to be transitive if its automorphism group in PGammaL(r+1,q) acts
transtively on the cap, and co-transitive if the automorphism group acts
transtively on the cap's complement in PG(r,q). Transitive, co-transitive caps
are characterized as being one of: an elliptic quadric in PG(3,q); a
Suzuki-Tits ovoid in PG(3,q); a hyperoval in PG(2,4); a cap of size 11 in
PG(4,3); the complement of a hyperplane in PG(r,2); or a union of Singer orbits
in PG(r,q) whose automorphism group comes from a subgroup of GammaL(1,q^{r+1}).Comment: To appear in The Bulletin of the Belgian Mathematical Society - Simon
Stevi
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