The term circle of Apollonius is used to describe several types of circles associated with Apollonius of Perga, a renowned Greek geometer. Most of these circles are found in planar Euclidean geometry, but analogs have been defined on other surfaces; for example, counterparts on the surface of a sphere can be defined through stereographic projection.
The main uses of this term are fivefold:
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A circle is usually defined as the set of points P at a given distance r (the circle's radius) from a given point (the circle's center). However, there are other, equivalent definitions of a circle. Apollonius discovered that a circle could also be defined as the set of points P that have a given ratio of distances k = d1/d2 to two given points (labeled A and B in Figure 1). These two points are sometimes called the foci.
The Apollonius pursuit problem is one of finding where a ship leaving from one point A at speed v1 will intercept another ship leaving a different point B at speed v2. By assumption, the ships travel in straight lines and the ratio of their speeds is denoted as k = v1/v2. At the point they meet, the first ship will have traveled a k-fold longer distance than the second ship. Therefore, the point must lie on a circle as defined by Apollonius, with their starting points as the foci.
The circles defined by the Apollonian pursuit problem for the same two points A and B, but with varying ratios of the two speeds, are disjoint from each other and form a continuous family that cover the entire plane; this family of circles is known as a hyperbolic pencil. Another family of circles, the circles that pass through both A and B, are also called a pencil, or more specifically an elliptic pencil. These two pencils of Apollonian circles intersect each other at right angles and form the basis of the bipolar coordinate system. Within each pencil, any two circles have the same radical axis; the two radical axes of the two pencils are perpendicular, and the centers of the circles from one pencil lie on the radical axis of the other pencil.
By solving Apollonius' problem repeatedly to find the inscribed circle, the interstices between mutually tangential circles can be filled arbitrarily finely, forming an Apollonian gasket, also known as a Leibniz packing or an Apollonian packing.[1] This gasket is a fractal, being self-similar and having a dimension d that is not known exactly but is roughly 1.3,[2] which is higher than that of a regular (or rectifiable) curve (d=1) but less than that of a plane (d=2). The Apollonian gasket was first described by Gottfried Leibniz in the 17th century, and is a curved precursor of the 20th-century Sierpiński triangle.[3] The Apollonian gasket also has deep connections to other fields of mathematics; for example, it is the limit set of Kleinian groups.[4]
Circles of Apollonius may be used as a technical term to denote three special circles defined by an arbitrary triangle . The circle is defined as the unique circle passing through the triangle vertex that maintains a constant ratio of distances to the other two vertices and (cf. Apollonius' definition of the circle above). Similarly, the circle is defined as the unique circle passing through the triangle vertex that maintains a constant ratio of distances to the other two vertices and , and so on for the circle .
All three circles intersect the circumcircle of the triangle orthogonally. All three circles pass through two points, denoted as the isodynamic points and of the triangle. The line connecting these common intersection points is the radical axis for all three circles. The two isodynamic points are inverses of each other relative to the circumcircle of the triangle.
Remarkably, the centers of these three circles fall on a single line (the Lemoine line). This line is perpendicular to the radical axis defined by the isodynamic points and .