In geometry, a set of points are said to be concyclic (or cocyclic) if they lie on a common circle. A polygon whose vertices are concyclic is called a cyclic polygon, and the circle is called its circumscribing circle or circumcircle. All concyclic points are equidistant from the center of the circle.
Three points in the Euclidean plane that do not all fall on a straight line are concyclic, so every triangle is a cyclic polygon, with a well-defined circumcircle. However, four or more points in the plane are not necessarily concyclic. After triangles, the special case of cyclic quadrilaterals has been most extensively studied.
The radius of the circle on which lie a set of points is, by definition, the radius of the circumcircle of any triangle with vertices at any three of those points. If the pairwise distances among three of the points are a, b, and c, then the circle's radius is
The equation of the circumcircle of a triangle, and expressions for the radius and the coordinates of the circle's center, in terms of the Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are given here.
Lester's theorem states that in any scalene triangle, the two , the nine-point center, and the circumcenter are concyclic.
If lines are drawn through the Lemoine point parallel to the sides of a triangle, then the six points of intersection of the lines and the sides of the triangle are concyclic, in what is called the Lemoine circle.
The van Lamoen circle associated with any given triangle contains the of the six triangles that are defined inside by its three medians.
A triangle's circumcenter, its Lemoine point, and its first two Brocard points are concyclic, with the segment from the circumcenter to the Lemoine point being a diameter.Scott, J. A. "Some examples of the use of areal coordinates in triangle geometry", Mathematical Gazette 83, November 1999, 472–477.
By Ptolemy's theorem, if a quadrilateral is given by the pairwise distances between its four vertices A, B, C, and D in order, then it is cyclic if and only if the product of the diagonals equals the sum of the products of opposite sides:
If two lines, one containing segment AC and the other containing segment BD, intersect at X, then the four points A, B, C, D are concyclic if and only if
The intersection X may be internal or external to the circle. This theorem is known as power of a point.
A convex quadrilateral is orthodiagonal (has perpendicular diagonals) if and only if the midpoints of the sides and the feet of the four altitudes are eight concyclic points, on what is called the eight-point circle.
For a cyclic polygon with an odd number of sides, all angles are equal if and only if the polygon is regular. A cyclic polygon with an even number of sides has all angles equal if and only if the alternate sides are equal (that is, sides are equal, and sides are equal).
A cyclic pentagon with rational number sides and area is known as a Robbins pentagon. In all known cases, its diagonals also have rational lengths, though whether this is true for all possible Robbins pentagons is an unsolved problem.
In any cyclic -gon with even , the sum of one set of alternate angles (the first, third, fifth, etc.) equals the sum of the other set of alternate angles. This can be proven by induction from the case, in each case replacing a side with three more sides and noting that these three new sides together with the old side form a quadrilateral which itself has this property; the alternate angles of the latter quadrilateral represent the additions to the alternate angle sums of the previous -gon.
A tangential polygon is one having an inscribed circle tangent to each side of the polygon; these tangency points are thus concyclic on the inscribed circle. Let one -gon be inscribed in a circle, and let another -gon be tangential to that circle at the vertices of the first -gon. Then from any point on the circle, the product of the perpendicular distances from to the sides of the first -gon equals the product of the perpendicular distances from to the sides of the second -gon. Republished by Dover Publications as Advanced Euclidean Geometry, 1960 and 2007.
\overline{MA_1} + \overline{MA_3} + \cdots + \overline{MA_{n-2}} + \overline{MA_n} < n/\sqrt{2} & \text{if } n \text{ is odd}; \\ \overline{MA_1} + \overline{MA_3} + \cdots + \overline{MA_{n-3}} + \overline{MA_{n-1}} \leq n/\sqrt{2} & \text{if } n \text{ is even}.\end{cases}
For a regular -gon, if are the distances from any point on the circumcircle to the vertices , then
. The reciprocal of this constant is the Kepler–Bouwkamp constant.
In the complex plane (formed by viewing the real and imaginary parts of a complex number as the x and y Cartesian coordinates of the plane), concyclicity has a particularly simple formulation: four points in the complex plane are either concyclic or collinear if and only if their cross-ratio is a real number..
Let be the angle spanned by one side of the cyclic polygon as viewed from the center of the circumscribing circle. Similarly define the for the remaining sides. Every Heronian triangle and every Brahmagupta quadrilateral has a rational value for the tangent of the quarter angle, , for every value of . Every known Robbins pentagon (has diagonals that have rational length and) has this property, though it is an unsolved problem whether every possible Robbins pentagon has this property.
The reverse is true for all cyclic polygons with any number of sides; if all such central angles have rational tangents for their quarter angles then the implied cyclic polygon circumscribed by the unit circle will simultaneously have rational side lengths and rational area. Additionally, each diagonal that connects two vertices, whether or not the two vertices are adjacent, will have a rational length. Such a cyclic polygon can be scaled so that its area and lengths are all integers.
This reverse relationship gives a way to generate cyclic polygons with integer area, sides, and diagonals. For a polygon with sides, let be rational numbers. These are the tangents of one quarter of the cumulative angles , , ..., . Let , let , and let for . These rational numbers are the tangents of the individual quarter angles, using the formula for the tangent of the difference of angles. Rational side lengths for the polygon circumscribed by the unit circle are thus obtained as . The rational area is . These can be made into integers by scaling the side lengths by a shared constant.
Even if a set of points are concyclic, their circumscribing circle may be different from their minimum bounding circle. For example, for an obtuse triangle, the minimum bounding circle has the longest side as diameter and does not pass through the opposite vertex.
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