Polar circle (geometry)

In geometry, the polar circle of a triangle is the circle whose center is the triangle's orthocenter and whose squared radius is

 \begin{align}
r^2 & = HA\times HD=HB\times HE=HC\times HF \\
& =-4R^2\cos A \cos B \cos C=\frac{1}{2}(a^2+b^2+c^2)-4R^2,
\end{align}

where A, B, C denote both the triangle's vertices and the angle measures at those vertices, H is the orthocenter (the intersection of the triangle's altitudes), D, E, F are the feet of the altitudes from vertices A, B, C respectively, R is the triangle's circumradius (the radius of its circumscribed circle), and a, b, c are the lengths of the triangle's sides opposite vertices A, B, C respectively.[1]:p. 176

The first parts of the radius formula reflect the fact that the orthocenter divides the altitudes into segment pairs of equal products. The trigonometric formula for the radius shows that the polar circle has a real existence only if the triangle is obtuse, so one of its angles is obtuse and hence has a negative cosine.

Construction

The polar circle can be geometrically constructed as follows. Pick one of the vertices of the triangle, say A. Let Z be the point where the altitude from A intersects the opposing side BC. Now draw the line through the orthocenter perpendicular to the altitude from A. There will be two points P on this line with the property that APZ is a right angle. The polar circle is the circle about the orthocenter of the triangle that passes through these two points.

Properties

Any two polar circles of two triangles in an orthocentric system are orthogonal.[1]:p. 177

The polar circles of the triangles of a complete quadrilateral form a coaxal system.[1]:p. 179

A triangle's circumcircle, its nine-point circle, its polar circle, and the circumcircle of its tangential triangle are coaxal.[2]:p. 241

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Johnson, Roger A., Advanced Euclidean Geometry, Dover Publications, 2007 (orig. 1960).
  2. Altshiller-Court, Nathan, College Geometry, Dover Publications, 2007 (orig. 1952).
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