Orthocentroidal circle

From HandWiki
Revision as of 18:06, 13 June 2021 by imported>LinuxGuru (update)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
A triangle (black), its orthocenter (blue), its centroid (red), and its orthocentroidal disk (yellow)
orthocentroidal circle and various triangle centers
H: Orthocenter
S: centroid
F1: first Fermat point
F2: second Fermat point
F: Feuerbach point
I: incenter
O: circumcenter
G: Gergonne point
U: symmedian point
N: center of the nine point circle


In geometry, the orthocentroidal circle of a non-equilateral triangle is the circle that has the triangle's orthocenter and its centroid at opposite ends of a diameter. This diameter also contains the triangle's nine-point center and is a subset of the Euler line, which also contains the circumcenter outside the orthocentroidal circle.

Guinand showed in 1984 that the triangle's incenter must lie in the interior of the orthocentroidal circle, but not coinciding with the nine-point center; that is, it must fall in the open orthocentroidal disk punctured at the nine-point center.[1][2][3][4] [5]:pp. 451–452 The incenter could be any such point, depending on the specific triangle having that particular orthocentroidal disk.[3]

Furthermore,[2] the Fermat point, the Gergonne point, and the symmedian point are in the open orthocentroidal disk punctured at its own center (and could be at any point therein), while the second Fermat point and Feuerbach point are in the exterior of the orthocentroidal circle. The set of potential locations of one or the other of the Brocard points is also the open orthocentroidal disk.[6]

The square of the diameter of the orthocentroidal circle is[7]:p.102 [math]\displaystyle{ D^2-\tfrac{4}{9}(a^2+b^2+c^2), }[/math] where a, b, and c are the triangle's side lengths and D is the diameter of its circumcircle.

References

  1. Guinand, Andrew P. (1984), "Euler lines, tritangent centers, and their triangles", American Mathematical Monthly 91 (5): 290–300, doi:10.2307/2322671 .
  2. 2.0 2.1 Bradley, Christopher J.; Smith, Geoff C. (2006), "The locations of triangle centers", Forum Geometricorum 6: 57–70, http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2006volume6/FG200607index.html .
  3. 3.0 3.1 Stern, Joseph (2007), "Euler’s triangle determination problem", Forum Geometricorum 7: 1–9, http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2007volume7/FG200701.pdf .
  4. Franzsen, William N. (2011), "The distance from the incenter to the Euler line", Forum Geometricorum 11: 231–236, http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2011volume11/FG201126index.html .
  5. Leversha, Gerry; Smith, G. C. (November 2007), "Euler and triangle geometry", Mathematical Gazette 91 (522): 436–452 .
  6. Bradley, Christopher J.; Smith, Geoff C. (2006), "The locations of the Brocard points", Forum Geometricorum 6: 71–77, http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2006volume6/FG200608index.html .
  7. Altshiller-Court, Nathan, College Geometry, Dover Publications, 2007 (orig. Barnes & Noble 1952).