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[[Image:Extouch Triangle and Nagel Point.svg|thumb|325px|

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In , the Nagel point (named for Christian Heinrich von Nagel) is a , one of the points associated with a given whose definition does not depend on the placement or scale of the triangle. It is the point of of all three of the triangle's splitters.


Construction
Given a triangle , let be the in which the - meets line , the -excircle meets line , and the -excircle meets line , respectively. The lines in the Nagel point of triangle .

Another construction of the point is to start at and trace around triangle , and similarly for and . Because of this construction, the Nagel point is sometimes also called the bisected perimeter point, and the segments are called the triangle's splitters.

There exists an easy construction of the Nagel point. Starting from each vertex of a triangle, it suffices to carry twice the length of the opposite edge. We obtain three lines which concur at the Nagel point.



Relation to other triangle centers
The Nagel point is the isotomic conjugate of the . The Nagel point, the , and the are on a line called the Nagel line. The incenter is the Nagel point of the ; equivalently, the Nagel point is the incenter of the anticomplementary triangle. The isogonal conjugate of the Nagel point is the point of concurrency of the lines joining the mixtilinear touchpoint and the opposite vertex.


Barycentric coordinates
The un-normalized barycentric coordinates of the Nagel point are (s-a:s-b:s-c) where s = \tfrac{a+b+c}{2} is the semi-perimeter of the reference triangle .


Trilinear coordinates
The trilinear coordinates of the Nagel point are as

\csc^2\left(\frac{A}{2}\right)\,:\,\csc^2\left(\frac{B}{2}\right)\,:\,\csc^2\left(\frac{C}{2}\right)

or, equivalently, in terms of the side lengths a=\left|\overline{BC}\right|, b=\left|\overline{CA}\right|, c=\left|\overline{AB}\right|,

\frac{b + c - a}{a}\,:\,\frac{c + a - b}{b}\,:\,\frac{a + b - c}{c}.


History
The Nagel point is named after Christian Heinrich von Nagel, a nineteenth-century German mathematician, who wrote about it in 1836. Early contributions to the study of this point were also made by August Leopold Crelle and Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.


See also
  • Mandart inellipse
  • Trisected perimeter point


External links

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