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In geometry, the nine-point circle is a circle that can be constructed for any given triangle. It is so named because it passes through nine significant points, six lying on the triangle itself (unless the triangle is obtuse). They include:

  • The midpoints of the three sides of the triangle,
  • The feet of the triangle's altitudes,
  • The points on each altitude of the triangle that bisect the line from the altitude's vertex to the triangle's orthocenter.

The nine-point circle is also known as Feuerbach's circle, Euler's circle, Terquem's circle, the six-points circle, the twelve-points circle, the n-point circle, the medioscribed circle, the mid circle or the circum-midcircle.

Significant points


Figure 1

The diagram above shows the nine significant points of the nine-point circle. Points D, E, and F are the midpoints of the three sides of the triangle. Points G, H, and I are the feet of the altitudes of the triangle. Points J, K, and L are the points on each altitude of the triangle that bisect the line from the altitude's vertex to the triangle's orthocenter (point S).

Discovery


Although he is accredited for its discovery, Karl Wilhelm Feuerbach did not even discover, in its entirety, the nine-point circle. He discovered the six point circle, recognizing the significance of points the midpoints of the three sides of the triangle and the feet of the altitudes of that triangle. (See Fig. 1, points D, E, F, G, H, and I.) (At a slightly earlier date, Charles Brianchon and Jean-Victor Poncelet had stated and proven the same theorem.) But soon after Feuerbach, mathematician Olry Terquem himself proved the existence of the circle. He was the first to recognize the added significance of the three points that are the midpoints of the line segments formed between the vertices of the triangle's altitudes and the triangle's orthocenter. (See Fig. 1, points J, K, and L.) Thus, Terquem was the first to use the name nine-point circle.

Tangent circles


In 1822 Karl Feuerbach discovered that any triangle's nine-point circle is externally tangent to that triangle's three excircles and internally tangent to its incircle. He postulated that:

... the circle which passes through the feet of the altitudes of a triangle is tangent to all four circles which in turn are tangent to the three sides of the triangle...
The following image illustrates this theorem.

Figure 2

Thus the point at which the incircle and the nine-point circle touch is often referred to as the Feuerbach point.

Other interesting facts


 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Nine-point circle".

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