Vecten points

Vecten points

Outer Vecten point

Let ABC be any given plane triangle. On the sides BC, CA, AB of the triangle, construct outwardly drawn three squares with centres O_a,O_b,O_c respectively. Then the lines AO_a, BO_b and CO_c are concurrent. The point of concurrence outer is Vecten point of the triangle ABC.

In Clark Kimberling's Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers, the outer Vecten point is denoted by X(485).[1] The Vecten points are named after an early 19th-century French mathematician named Vecten, who taught mathematics with Gergonne in Nîmes and published a study of the figure of three squares on the sides of a triangle in 1817.[2]

Inner Vecten point

Let ABC be any given plane triangle. On the sides BC, CA, AB of the triangle, construct inwardly drawn three squares respectively with centres I_a,I_b,I_c respectively. Then the lines AI_a, BI_b and CI_c are concurrent. The point of concurrence is inner Vecten point of the triangle ABC.

In Clark Kimberling's Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers, the inner Vecten point is denoted by X(486).[1]

The line X(485)X(486) meets the Euler line at the Nine point center of the triangle ABC. The Vecten points lie on the Kiepert hyperbola

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kimberling, Clark. "Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers".
  2. Ayme, Jean-Louis, La Figure de Vecten, retrieved 2014-11-04.

External links