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Strongly Minimal Steiner Systems I: Existence

A linear space is a system of points and lines such that any two distinct points determine a unique line; a Steiner $k$-system (for $k \geq 2$) is a linear space such that each line has size exactly $k$. Clearly, as a two-sorted structure, no linear space can be strongly minimal. We formulate linear spaces in a (bi-interpretable) vocabulary $τ$ with a single ternary relation $R$. We prove that for every integer $k$ there exist $2^{\aleph_0}$-many integer valued functions $μ$ such that each $μ$ determines a distinct strongly minimal Steiner $k$-system $\mathcal{G}_μ$, whose algebraic closure geometry has all the properties of the ab initio Hrushovski construction. Thus each is a counterexample to the Zilber Trichotomy Conjecture.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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