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Problem of Apollonius

In Euclidean plane geometry, Apollonius's problem is to construct circles that are tangent to three given circles in a plane (Figure 1). Apollonius of Perga (c. 262 BC – c. 190 BC) posed and solved this famous problem in his work Ἐπαφαί (Epaphaí, "Tangencies"); this work has been lost, but a 4th-century AD report of his results by Pappus of Alexandria has survived. Three given circles generically have eight different circles that are tangent to them (Figure 2), a pair of solutions for each way to divide the three given circles in two subsets (there are 4 ways to divide a set of cardinality 3 in 2 parts).

Figure 1: A solution (in purple) to Apollonius's problem. The given circles are shown in black.
Figure 2: Four complementary pairs of solutions to Apollonius's problem; the given circles are black.

In the 16th century, Adriaan van Roomen solved the problem using intersecting hyperbolas, but this solution does not use only straightedge and compass constructions. François Viète found such a solution by exploiting limiting cases: any of the three given circles can be shrunk to zero radius (a point) or expanded to infinite radius (a line). Viète's approach, which uses simpler limiting cases to solve more complicated ones, is considered a plausible reconstruction of Apollonius' method. The method of van Roomen was simplified by Isaac Newton, who showed that Apollonius' problem is equivalent to finding a position from the differences of its distances to three known points. This has applications in navigation and positioning systems such as LORAN.

Later mathematicians introduced algebraic methods, which transform a geometric problem into algebraic equations. These methods were simplified by exploiting symmetries inherent in the problem of Apollonius: for instance solution circles generically occur in pairs, with one solution enclosing the given circles that the other excludes (Figure 2). Joseph Diaz Gergonne used this symmetry to provide an elegant straightedge and compass solution, while other mathematicians used geometrical transformations such as reflection in a circle to simplify the configuration of the given circles. These developments provide a geometrical setting for algebraic methods (using Lie sphere geometry) and a classification of solutions according to 33 essentially different configurations of the given circles.

Apollonius' problem has stimulated much further work. Generalizations to three dimensions—constructing a sphere tangent to four given spheres—and beyond have been studied. The configuration of three mutually tangent circles has received particular attention. René Descartes gave a formula relating the radii of the solution circles and the given circles, now known as Descartes' theorem. Solving Apollonius' problem iteratively in this case leads to the Apollonian gasket, which is one of the earliest fractals to be described in print, and is important in number theory via Ford circles and the Hardy–Littlewood circle method.

Statement of the problem edit

The general statement of Apollonius' problem is to construct one or more circles that are tangent to three given objects in a plane, where an object may be a line, a point or a circle of any size.[1][2][3][4] These objects may be arranged in any way and may cross one another; however, they are usually taken to be distinct, meaning that they do not coincide. Solutions to Apollonius' problem are sometimes called Apollonius circles, although the term is also used for other types of circles associated with Apollonius.

The property of tangency is defined as follows. First, a point, line or circle is assumed to be tangent to itself; hence, if a given circle is already tangent to the other two given objects, it is counted as a solution to Apollonius' problem. Two distinct geometrical objects are said to intersect if they have a point in common. By definition, a point is tangent to a circle or a line if it intersects them, that is, if it lies on them; thus, two distinct points cannot be tangent. If the angle between lines or circles at an intersection point is zero, they are said to be tangent; the intersection point is called a tangent point or a point of tangency. (The word "tangent" derives from the Latin present participle, tangens, meaning "touching".) In practice, two distinct circles are tangent if they intersect at only one point; if they intersect at zero or two points, they are not tangent. The same holds true for a line and a circle. Two distinct lines cannot be tangent in the plane, although two parallel lines can be considered as tangent at a point at infinity in inversive geometry (see below).[5][6]

The solution circle may be either internally or externally tangent to each of the given circles. An external tangency is one where the two circles bend away from each other at their point of contact; they lie on opposite sides of the tangent line at that point, and they exclude one another. The distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii. By contrast, an internal tangency is one in which the two circles curve in the same way at their point of contact; the two circles lie on the same side of the tangent line, and one circle encloses the other. In this case, the distance between their centers equals the difference of their radii. As an illustration, in Figure 1, the pink solution circle is internally tangent to the medium-sized given black circle on the right, whereas it is externally tangent to the smallest and largest given circles on the left.

Apollonius' problem can also be formulated as the problem of locating one or more points such that the differences of its distances to three given points equal three known values. Consider a solution circle of radius rs and three given circles of radii r1, r2 and r3. If the solution circle is externally tangent to all three given circles, the distances between the center of the solution circle and the centers of the given circles equal d1 = r1 + rs, d2 = r2 + rs and d3 = r3 + rs, respectively. Therefore, differences in these distances are constants, such as d1d2 = r1r2; they depend only on the known radii of the given circles and not on the radius rs of the solution circle, which cancels out. This second formulation of Apollonius' problem can be generalized to internally tangent solution circles (for which the center-center distance equals the difference of radii), by changing the corresponding differences of distances to sums of distances, so that the solution-circle radius rs again cancels out. The re-formulation in terms of center-center distances is useful in the solutions below of Adriaan van Roomen and Isaac Newton, and also in hyperbolic positioning or trilateration, which is the task of locating a position from differences in distances to three known points. For example, navigation systems such as LORAN identify a receiver's position from the differences in arrival times of signals from three fixed positions, which correspond to the differences in distances to those transmitters.[7][8]

History edit

A rich repertoire of geometrical and algebraic methods have been developed to solve Apollonius' problem,[9][10] which has been called "the most famous of all" geometry problems.[3] The original approach of Apollonius of Perga has been lost, but reconstructions have been offered by François Viète and others, based on the clues in the description by Pappus of Alexandria.[11][12] The first new solution method was published in 1596 by Adriaan van Roomen, who identified the centers of the solution circles as the intersection points of two hyperbolas.[13][14] Van Roomen's method was refined in 1687 by Isaac Newton in his Principia,[15][16] and by John Casey in 1881.[17]

Although successful in solving Apollonius' problem, van Roomen's method has a drawback. A prized property in classical Euclidean geometry is the ability to solve problems using only a compass and a straightedge.[18] Many constructions are impossible using only these tools, such as dividing an angle in three equal parts. However, many such "impossible" problems can be solved by intersecting curves such as hyperbolas, ellipses and parabolas (conic sections). For example, doubling the cube (the problem of constructing a cube of twice the volume of a given cube) cannot be done using only a straightedge and compass, but Menaechmus showed that the problem can be solved by using the intersections of two parabolas.[19] Therefore, van Roomen's solution—which uses the intersection of two hyperbolas—did not determine if the problem satisfied the straightedge-and-compass property.

Van Roomen's friend François Viète, who had urged van Roomen to work on Apollonius' problem in the first place, developed a method that used only compass and straightedge.[20] Prior to Viète's solution, Regiomontanus doubted whether Apollonius' problem could be solved by straightedge and compass.[21] Viète first solved some simple special cases of Apollonius' problem, such as finding a circle that passes through three given points which has only one solution if the points are distinct; he then built up to solving more complicated special cases, in some cases by shrinking or swelling the given circles.[1] According to the 4th-century report of Pappus, Apollonius' own book on this problem—entitled Ἐπαφαί (Epaphaí, "Tangencies"; Latin: De tactionibus, De contactibus)—followed a similar progressive approach.[11] Hence, Viète's solution is considered to be a plausible reconstruction of Apollonius' solution, although other reconstructions have been published independently by three different authors.[22]

Several other geometrical solutions to Apollonius' problem were developed in the 19th century. The most notable solutions are those of Jean-Victor Poncelet (1811)[23] and of Joseph Diaz Gergonne (1814).[24] Whereas Poncelet's proof relies on homothetic centers of circles and the power of a point theorem, Gergonne's method exploits the conjugate relation between lines and their poles in a circle. Methods using circle inversion were pioneered by Julius Petersen in 1879;[25] one example is the annular solution method of HSM Coxeter.[2] Another approach uses Lie sphere geometry,[26] which was developed by Sophus Lie.

Algebraic solutions to Apollonius' problem were pioneered in the 17th century by René Descartes and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia, although their solutions were rather complex.[9] Practical algebraic methods were developed in the late 18th and 19th centuries by several mathematicians, including Leonhard Euler,[27] Nicolas Fuss,[9] Carl Friedrich Gauss,[28] Lazare Carnot,[29] and Augustin Louis Cauchy.[30]

Solution methods edit

Intersecting hyperbolas edit

 
Figure 3: Two given circles (black) and a circle tangent to both (pink). The center-to-center distances d1 and d2 equal r1 + rs and r2 + rs, respectively, so their difference is independent of rs.

The solution of Adriaan van Roomen (1596) is based on the intersection of two hyperbolas.[13][14] Let the given circles be denoted as C1, C2 and C3. Van Roomen solved the general problem by solving a simpler problem, that of finding the circles that are tangent to two given circles, such as C1 and C2. He noted that the center of a circle tangent to both given circles must lie on a hyperbola whose foci are the centers of the given circles. To understand this, let the radii of the solution circle and the two given circles be denoted as rs, r1 and r2, respectively (Figure 3). The distance d1 between the centers of the solution circle and C1 is either rs + r1 or rsr1, depending on whether these circles are chosen to be externally or internally tangent, respectively. Similarly, the distance d2 between the centers of the solution circle and C2 is either rs + r2 or rsr2, again depending on their chosen tangency. Thus, the difference d1d2 between these distances is always a constant that is independent of rs. This property, of having a fixed difference between the distances to the foci, characterizes hyperbolas, so the possible centers of the solution circle lie on a hyperbola. A second hyperbola can be drawn for the pair of given circles C2 and C3, where the internal or external tangency of the solution and C2 should be chosen consistently with that of the first hyperbola. An intersection of these two hyperbolas (if any) gives the center of a solution circle that has the chosen internal and external tangencies to the three given circles. The full set of solutions to Apollonius' problem can be found by considering all possible combinations of internal and external tangency of the solution circle to the three given circles.

Isaac Newton (1687) refined van Roomen's solution, so that the solution-circle centers were located at the intersections of a line with a circle.[15] Newton formulates Apollonius' problem as a problem in trilateration: to locate a point Z from three given points A, B and C, such that the differences in distances from Z to the three given points have known values.[31] These four points correspond to the center of the solution circle (Z) and the centers of the three given circles (A, B and C).

 
The set of points with a constant ratio of distances d1/d2 to two fixed points is a circle.

Instead of solving for the two hyperbolas, Newton constructs their directrix lines instead. For any hyperbola, the ratio of distances from a point Z to a focus A and to the directrix is a fixed constant called the eccentricity. The two directrices intersect at a point T, and from their two known distance ratios, Newton constructs a line passing through T on which Z must lie. However, the ratio of distances TZ/TA is also known; hence, Z also lies on a known circle, since Apollonius had shown that a circle can be defined as the set of points that have a given ratio of distances to two fixed points. (As an aside, this definition is the basis of bipolar coordinates.) Thus, the solutions to Apollonius' problem are the intersections of a line with a circle.

Viète's reconstruction edit

As described below, Apollonius' problem has ten special cases, depending on the nature of the three given objects, which may be a circle (C), line (L) or point (P). By custom, these ten cases are distinguished by three letter codes such as CCP.[32] Viète solved all ten of these cases using only compass and straightedge constructions, and used the solutions of simpler cases to solve the more complex cases.[1][20]

 
Figure 4: Tangency between circles is preserved if their radii are changed by equal amounts. A pink solution circle must shrink or swell with an internally tangent circle (black circle on the right), while externally tangent circles (two black circles on left) do the opposite.

Viète began by solving the PPP case (three points) following the method of Euclid in his Elements. From this, he derived a lemma corresponding to the power of a point theorem, which he used to solve the LPP case (a line and two points). Following Euclid a second time, Viète solved the LLL case (three lines) using the angle bisectors. He then derived a lemma for constructing the line perpendicular to an angle bisector that passes through a point, which he used to solve the LLP problem (two lines and a point). This accounts for the first four cases of Apollonius' problem, those that do not involve circles.

To solve the remaining problems, Viète exploited the fact that the given circles and the solution circle may be re-sized in tandem while preserving their tangencies (Figure 4). If the solution-circle radius is changed by an amount Δr, the radius of its internally tangent given circles must be likewise changed by Δr, whereas the radius of its externally tangent given circles must be changed by −Δr. Thus, as the solution circle swells, the internally tangent given circles must swell in tandem, whereas the externally tangent given circles must shrink, to maintain their tangencies.

Viète used this approach to shrink one of the given circles to a point, thus reducing the problem to a simpler, already solved case. He first solved the CLL case (a circle and two lines) by shrinking the circle into a point, rendering it an LLP case. He then solved the CLP case (a circle, a line and a point) using three lemmas. Again shrinking one circle to a point, Viète transformed the CCL case into a CLP case. He then solved the CPP case (a circle and two points) and the CCP case (two circles and a point), the latter case by two lemmas. Finally, Viète solved the general CCC case (three circles) by shrinking one circle to a point, rendering it a CCP case.

Algebraic solutions edit

Apollonius' problem can be framed as a system of three equations for the center and radius of the solution circle.[33] Since the three given circles and any solution circle must lie in the same plane, their positions can be specified in terms of the (x, y) coordinates of their centers. For example, the center positions of the three given circles may be written as (x1, y1), (x2, y2) and (x3, y3), whereas that of a solution circle can be written as (xs, ys). Similarly, the radii of the given circles and a solution circle can be written as r1, r2, r3 and rs, respectively. The requirement that a solution circle must exactly touch each of the three given circles can be expressed as three coupled quadratic equations for xs, ys and rs:

 
 
 

The three numbers s1, s2 and s3 on the right-hand side, called signs, may equal ±1, and specify whether the desired solution circle should touch the corresponding given circle internally (s = 1) or externally (s = −1). For example, in Figures 1 and 4, the pink solution is internally tangent to the medium-sized given circle on the right and externally tangent to the smallest and largest given circles on the left; if the given circles are ordered by radius, the signs for this solution are "− + −". Since the three signs may be chosen independently, there are eight possible sets of equations (2 × 2 × 2 = 8), each set corresponding to one of the eight types of solution circles.

The general system of three equations may be solved by the method of resultants. When multiplied out, all three equations have xs2 + ys2 on the left-hand side, and rs2 on the right-hand side. Subtracting one equation from another eliminates these quadratic terms; the remaining linear terms may be re-arranged to yield formulae for the coordinates xs and ys

 
 

where M, N, P and Q are known functions of the given circles and the choice of signs. Substitution of these formulae into one of the initial three equations gives a quadratic equation for rs, which can be solved by the quadratic formula. Substitution of the numerical value of rs into the linear formulae yields the corresponding values of xs and ys.

The signs s1, s2 and s3 on the right-hand sides of the equations may be chosen in eight possible ways, and each choice of signs gives up to two solutions, since the equation for rs is quadratic. This might suggest (incorrectly) that there are up to sixteen solutions of Apollonius' problem. However, due to a symmetry of the equations, if (rs, xs, ys) is a solution, with signs si, then so is (−rs, xs, ys), with opposite signs −si, which represents the same solution circle. Therefore, Apollonius' problem has at most eight independent solutions (Figure 2). One way to avoid this double-counting is to consider only solution circles with non-negative radius.

The two roots of any quadratic equation may be of three possible types: two different real numbers, two identical real numbers (i.e., a degenerate double root), or a pair of complex conjugate roots. The first case corresponds to the usual situation; each pair of roots corresponds to a pair of solutions that are related by circle inversion, as described below (Figure 6). In the second case, both roots are identical, corresponding to a solution circle that transforms into itself under inversion. In this case, one of the given circles is itself a solution to the Apollonius problem, and the number of distinct solutions is reduced by one. The third case of complex conjugate radii does not correspond to a geometrically possible solution for Apollonius' problem, since a solution circle cannot have an imaginary radius; therefore, the number of solutions is reduced by two. Apollonius' problem cannot have seven solutions, although it may have any other number of solutions from zero to eight.[12][34]

Lie sphere geometry edit

The same algebraic equations can be derived in the context of Lie sphere geometry.[26] That geometry represents circles, lines and points in a unified way, as a five-dimensional vector X = (v, cx, cy, w, sr), where c = (cx, cy) is the center of the circle, and r is its (non-negative) radius. If r is not zero, the sign s may be positive or negative; for visualization, s represents the orientation of the circle, with counterclockwise circles having a positive s and clockwise circles having a negative s. The parameter w is zero for a straight line, and one otherwise.

In this five-dimensional world, there is a bilinear product similar to the dot product:

 

The Lie quadric is defined as those vectors whose product with themselves (their square norm) is zero, (X|X) = 0. Let X1 and X2 be two vectors belonging to this quadric; the norm of their difference equals

 

The product distributes over addition and subtraction (more precisely, it is bilinear):

 

Since (X1|X1) = (X2|X2) = 0 (both belong to the Lie quadric) and since w1 = w2 = 1 for circles, the product of any two such vectors on the quadric equals

 

where the vertical bars sandwiching c1c2 represent the length of that difference vector, i.e., the Euclidean norm. This formula shows that if two quadric vectors X1 and X2 are orthogonal (perpendicular) to one another—that is, if (X1|X2) = 0—then their corresponding circles are tangent. For if the two signs s1 and s2 are the same (i.e. the circles have the same "orientation"), the circles are internally tangent; the distance between their centers equals the difference in the radii

 

Conversely, if the two signs s1 and s2 are different (i.e. the circles have opposite "orientations"), the circles are externally tangent; the distance between their centers equals the sum of the radii

 

Therefore, Apollonius' problem can be re-stated in Lie geometry as a problem of finding perpendicular vectors on the Lie quadric; specifically, the goal is to identify solution vectors Xsol that belong to the Lie quadric and are also orthogonal (perpendicular) to the vectors X1, X2 and X3 corresponding to the given circles.

 

The advantage of this re-statement is that one can exploit theorems from linear algebra on the maximum number of linearly independent, simultaneously perpendicular vectors. This gives another way to calculate the maximum number of solutions and extend the theorem to higher-dimensional spaces.[26][35]

Inversive methods edit

 
Figure 5: Inversion in a circle. The point P' is the inverse of point P with respect to the circle.

A natural setting for problem of Apollonius is inversive geometry.[4][12] The basic strategy of inversive methods is to transform a given Apollonius problem into another Apollonius problem that is simpler to solve; the solutions to the original problem are found from the solutions of the transformed problem by undoing the transformation. Candidate transformations must change one Apollonius problem into another; therefore, they must transform the given points, circles and lines to other points, circles and lines, and no other shapes. Circle inversion has this property and allows the center and radius of the inversion circle to be chosen judiciously. Other candidates include the Euclidean plane isometries; however, they do not simplify the problem, since they merely shift, rotate, and mirror the original problem.

Inversion in a circle with center O and radius R consists of the following operation (Figure 5): every point P is mapped into a new point P' such that O, P, and P' are collinear, and the product of the distances of P and P' to the center O equal the radius R squared

 

Thus, if P lies outside the circle, then P' lies within, and vice versa. When P is the same as O, the inversion is said to send P to infinity. (In complex analysis, "infinity" is defined in terms of the Riemann sphere.) Inversion has the useful property that lines and circles are always transformed into lines and circles, and points are always transformed into points. Circles are generally transformed into other circles under inversion; however, if a circle passes through the center of the inversion circle, it is transformed into a straight line, and vice versa. Importantly, if a circle crosses the circle of inversion at right angles (intersects perpendicularly), it is left unchanged by the inversion; it is transformed into itself.

Circle inversions correspond to a subset of Möbius transformations on the Riemann sphere. The planar Apollonius problem can be transferred to the sphere by an inverse stereographic projection; hence, solutions of the planar Apollonius problem also pertain to its counterpart on the sphere. Other inversive solutions to the planar problem are possible besides the common ones described below.[36]

Pairs of solutions by inversion edit

 
Figure 6: A conjugate pair of solutions to Apollonius's problem (pink circles), with given circles in black.

Solutions to Apollonius's problem generally occur in pairs; for each solution circle, there is a conjugate solution circle (Figure 6).[1] One solution circle excludes the given circles that are enclosed by its conjugate solution, and vice versa. For example, in Figure 6, one solution circle (pink, upper left) encloses two given circles (black), but excludes a third; conversely, its conjugate solution (also pink, lower right) encloses that third given circle, but excludes the other two. The two conjugate solution circles are related by inversion, by the following argument.

In general, any three distinct circles have a unique circle—the radical circle—that intersects all of them perpendicularly; the center of that circle is the radical center of the three circles.[4] For illustration, the orange circle in Figure 6 crosses the black given circles at right angles. Inversion in the radical circle leaves the given circles unchanged, but transforms the two conjugate pink solution circles into one another. Under the same inversion, the corresponding points of tangency of the two solution circles are transformed into one another; for illustration, in Figure 6, the two blue points lying on each green line are transformed into one another. Hence, the lines connecting these conjugate tangent points are invariant under the inversion; therefore, they must pass through the center of inversion, which is the radical center (green lines intersecting at the orange dot in Figure 6).

Inversion to an annulus edit

If two of the three given circles do not intersect, a center of inversion can be chosen so that those two given circles become concentric.[2][12] Under this inversion, the solution circles must fall within the annulus between the two concentric circles. Therefore, they belong to two one-parameter families. In the first family (Figure 7), the solutions do not enclose the inner concentric circle, but rather revolve like ball bearings in the annulus. In the second family (Figure 8), the solution circles enclose the inner concentric circle. There are generally four solutions for each family, yielding eight possible solutions, consistent with the algebraic solution.

 
Figure 7: A solution circle (pink) in the first family lies between concentric given circles (black). Twice the solution radius rs equals the difference routerrinner of the inner and outer radii, while twice its center distance ds equals their sum.
 
Figure 8: A solution circle (pink) in the second family encloses the inner given circle (black). Twice the solution radius rs equals the sum router + rinner of the inner and outer radii, while twice its center distance ds equals their difference.

When two of the given circles are concentric, Apollonius's problem can be solved easily using a method of Gauss.[28] The radii of the three given circles are known, as is the distance dnon from the common concentric center to the non-concentric circle (Figure 7). The solution circle can be determined from its radius rs, the angle θ, and the distances ds and dT from its center to the common concentric center and the center of the non-concentric circle, respectively. The radius and distance ds are known (Figure 7), and the distance dT = rs ± rnon, depending on whether the solution circle is internally or externally tangent to the non-concentric circle. Therefore, by the law of cosines,

 

Here, a new constant C has been defined for brevity, with the subscript indicating whether the solution is externally or internally tangent. A simple trigonometric rearrangement yields the four solutions

 

This formula represents four solutions, corresponding to the two choices of the sign of θ, and the two choices for C. The remaining four solutions can be obtained by the same method, using the substitutions for rs and ds indicated in Figure 8. Thus, all eight solutions of the general Apollonius problem can be found by this method.

Any initial two disjoint given circles can be rendered concentric as follows. The radical axis of the two given circles is constructed; choosing two arbitrary points P and Q on this radical axis, two circles can be constructed that are centered on P and Q and that intersect the two given circles orthogonally. These two constructed circles intersect each other in two points. Inversion in one such intersection point F renders the constructed circles into straight lines emanating from F and the two given circles into concentric circles, with the third given circle becoming another circle (in general). This follows because the system of circles is equivalent to a set of Apollonian circles, forming a bipolar coordinate system.

Resizing and inversion edit

The usefulness of inversion can be increased significantly by resizing.[37][38] As noted in Viète's reconstruction, the three given circles and the solution circle can be resized in tandem while preserving their tangencies. Thus, the initial Apollonius problem is transformed into another problem that may be easier to solve. For example, the four circles can be resized so that one given circle is shrunk to a point; alternatively, two given circles can often be resized so that they are tangent to one another. Thirdly, given circles that intersect can be resized so that they become non-intersecting, after which the method for inverting to an annulus can be applied. In all such cases, the solution of the original Apollonius problem is obtained from the solution of the transformed problem by undoing the resizing and inversion.

Shrinking one given circle to a point edit

In the first approach, the given circles are shrunk or swelled (appropriately to their tangency) until one given circle is shrunk to a point P.[37] In that case, Apollonius' problem degenerates to the CCP limiting case, which is the problem of finding a solution circle tangent to the two remaining given circles that passes through the point P. Inversion in a circle centered on P transforms the two given circles into new circles, and the solution circle into a line. Therefore, the transformed solution is a line that is tangent to the two transformed given circles. There are four such solution lines, which may be constructed from the external and internal homothetic centers of the two circles. Re-inversion in P and undoing the resizing transforms such a solution line into the desired solution circle of the original Apollonius problem. All eight general solutions can be obtained by shrinking and swelling the circles according to the differing internal and external tangencies of each solution; however, different given circles may be shrunk to a point for different solutions.

Resizing two given circles to tangency edit

In the second approach, the radii of the given circles are modified appropriately by an amount Δr so that two of them are tangential (touching).[38] Their point of tangency is chosen as the center of inversion in a circle that intersects each of the two touching circles in two places. Upon inversion, the touching circles become two parallel lines: Their only point of intersection is sent to infinity under inversion, so they cannot meet. The same inversion transforms the third circle into another circle. The solution of the inverted problem must either be (1) a straight line parallel to the two given parallel lines and tangent to the transformed third given circle; or (2) a circle of constant radius that is tangent to the two given parallel lines and the transformed given circle. Re-inversion and adjusting the radii of all circles by Δr produces a solution circle tangent to the original three circles.

Gergonne's solution edit

 
Figure 9: The two tangent lines of the two tangent points of a given circle intersect on the radical axis R (red line) of the two solution circles (pink). The three points of intersection on R are the poles of the lines connecting the blue tangent points in each given circle (black).

Gergonne's approach is to consider the solution circles in pairs.[1] Let a pair of solution circles be denoted as CA and CB (the pink circles in Figure 6), and let their tangent points with the three given circles be denoted as A1, A2, A3, and B1, B2, B3, respectively. Gergonne's solution aims to locate these six points, and thus solve for the two solution circles.

Gergonne's insight was that if a line L1 could be constructed such that A1 and B1 were guaranteed to fall on it, those two points could be identified as the intersection points of L1 with the given circle C1 (Figure 6). The remaining four tangent points would be located similarly, by finding lines L2 and L3 that contained A2 and B2, and A3 and B3, respectively. To construct a line such as L1, two points must be identified that lie on it; but these points need not be the tangent points. Gergonne was able to identify two other points for each of the three lines. One of the two points has already been identified: the radical center G lies on all three lines (Figure 6).

To locate a second point on the lines L1, L2 and L3, Gergonne noted a reciprocal relationship between those lines and the radical axis R of the solution circles, CA and CB. To understand this reciprocal relationship, consider the two tangent lines to the circle C1 drawn at its tangent points A1 and B1 with the solution circles; the intersection of these tangent lines is the pole point of L1 in C1. Since the distances from that pole point to the tangent points A1 and B1 are equal, this pole point must also lie on the radical axis R of the solution circles, by definition (Figure 9). The relationship between pole points and their polar lines is reciprocal; if the pole of L1 in C1 lies on R, the pole of R in C1 must conversely lie on L1. Thus, if we can construct R, we can find its pole P1 in C1, giving the needed second point on L1 (Figure 10).

 
Figure 10: The poles (red points) of the radical axis R in the three given circles (black) lie on the green lines connecting the tangent points. These lines may be constructed from the poles and the radical center (orange).

Gergonne found the radical axis R of the unknown solution circles as follows. Any pair of circles has two centers of similarity; these two points are the two possible intersections of two tangent lines to the two circles. Therefore, the three given circles have six centers of similarity, two for each distinct pair of given circles. Remarkably, these six points lie on four lines, three points on each line; moreover, each line corresponds to the radical axis of a potential pair of solution circles. To show this, Gergonne considered lines through corresponding points of tangency on two of the given circles, e.g., the line defined by A1/A2 and the line defined by B1/B2. Let X3 be a center of similitude for the two circles C1 and C2; then, A1/A2 and B1/B2 are pairs of antihomologous points, and their lines intersect at X3. It follows, therefore, that the products of distances are equal

 

which implies that X3 lies on the radical axis of the two solution circles. The same argument can be applied to the other pairs of circles, so that three centers of similitude for the given three circles must lie on the radical axes of pairs of solution circles.

In summary, the desired line L1 is defined by two points: the radical center G of the three given circles and the pole in C1 of one of the four lines connecting the homothetic centers. Finding the same pole in C2 and C3 gives L2 and L3, respectively; thus, all six points can be located, from which one pair of solution circles can be found. Repeating this procedure for the remaining three homothetic-center lines yields six more solutions, giving eight solutions in all. However, if a line Lk does not intersect its circle Ck for some k, there is no pair of solutions for that homothetic-center line.

Intersection theory edit

The techniques of modern algebraic geometry, and in particular intersection theory, can be used to solve Apollonius's problem. In this approach, the problem is reinterpreted as a statement about circles in the complex projective plane. Solutions involving complex numbers are allowed and degenerate situations are counted with multiplicity. When this is done, there are always eight solutions to the problem.[39]

Every quadratic equation in X, Y, and Z determines a unique conic, its vanishing locus. Conversely, every conic in the complex projective plane has an equation, and that equation is unique up to an overall scaling factor (because rescaling an equation does not change its vanishing locus). Therefore, the set of all conics may be parametrized by five-dimensional projective space P5, where the correspondence is

 

A circle in the complex projective plane is defined to be a conic that passes through the two points O+ = [1 : i : 0] and O = [1 : −i : 0], where i denotes a square root of −1. The points O+ and O are called the circular points. The projective variety of all circles is the subvariety of P5 consisting of those points which correspond to conics passing through the circular points. Substituting the circular points into the equation for a generic conic yields the two equations

 
 

Taking the sum and difference of these equations shows that it is equivalent to impose the conditions

  and  .

Therefore, the variety of all circles is a three-dimensional linear subspace of P5. After rescaling and completing the square, these equations also demonstrate that every conic passing through the circular points has an equation of the form

 

which is the homogenization of the usual equation of a circle in the affine plane. Therefore, studying circles in the above sense is nearly equivalent to studying circles in the conventional sense. The only difference is that the above sense permits degenerate circles which are the union of two lines. The non-degenerate circles are called smooth circles, while the degenerate ones are called singular circles. There are two types of singular circles. One is the union of the line at infinity Z = 0 with another line in the projective plane (possibly the line at infinity again), and the other is union of two lines in the projective plane, one through each of the two circular points. These are the limits of smooth circles as the radius r tends to +∞ and 0, respectively. In the latter case, no point on either of the two lines has real coordinates except for the origin [0 : 0 : 1].

Let D be a fixed smooth circle. If C is any other circle, then, by the definition of a circle, C and D intersect at the circular points O+ and O. Because C and D are conics, Bézout's theorem implies C and D intersect in four points total, when those points are counted with the proper intersection multiplicity. That is, there are four points of intersection O+, O, P, and Q, but some of these points might collide. Appolonius' problem is concerned with the situation where P = Q, meaning that the intersection multiplicity at that point is 2; if P is also equal to a circular point, this should be interpreted as the intersection multiplicity being 3.

Let ZD be the variety of circles tangent to D. This variety is a quadric cone in the P3 of all circles. To see this, consider the incidence correspondence

 

For a curve that is the vanishing locus of a single equation f = 0, the condition that the curve meets D at r with multiplicity m means that the Taylor series expansion of f|D vanishes to order m at r; it is therefore m linear conditions on the coefficients of f. This shows that, for each r, the fiber of Φ over r is a P1 cut out by two linear equations in the space of circles. Consequently, Φ is irreducible of dimension 2. Since it is possible to exhibit a circle that is tangent to D at only a single point, a generic element of ZD must be tangent at only a single point. Therefore, the projection Φ → P2 sending (r, C) to C is a birational morphism. It follows that the image of Φ, which is ZD, is also irreducible and two dimensional.

To determine the shape of ZD, fix two distinct circles C0 and C, not necessarily tangent to D. These two circles determine a pencil, meaning a line L in the P3 of circles. If the equations of C0 and C are f and g, respectively, then the points on L correspond to the circles whose equations are Sf + Tg, where [S : T] is a point of P1. The points where L meets ZD are precisely the circles in the pencil that are tangent to D.

There are two possibilities for the number of points of intersections. One is that either f or g, say f, is the equation for D. In this case, L is a line through D. If C is tangent to D, then so is every circle in the pencil, and therefore L is contained in ZD. The other possibility is that neither f nor g is the equation for D. In this case, the function (f / g)|D is a quotient of quadratics, neither of which vanishes identically. Therefore, it vanishes at two points and has poles at two points. These are the points in C0D and CD, respectively, counted with multiplicity and with the circular points deducted. The rational function determines a morphism DP1 of degree two. The fiber over [S : T] ∈ P1 is the set of points P for which f(P)T = g(P)S. These are precisely the points at which the circle whose equation is TfSg meets D. The branch points of this morphism are the circles tangent to D. By the Riemann–Hurwitz formula, there are precisely two branch points, and therefore L meets ZD in two points. Together, these two possibilities for the intersection of L and ZD demonstrate that ZD is a quadric cone. All such cones in P3 are the same up to a change of coordinates, so this completely determines the shape of ZD.

To conclude the argument, let D1, D2, and D3 be three circles. If the intersection ZD1ZD2ZD3 is finite, then it has degree 23 = 8, and therefore there are eight solutions to the problem of Apollonius, counted with multiplicity. To prove that the intersection is generically finite, consider the incidence correspondence

 

There is a morphism which projects Ψ onto its final factor of P3. The fiber over C is ZC3. This has dimension 6, so Ψ has dimension 9. Because (P3)3 also has dimension 9, the generic fiber of the projection from Ψ to the first three factors cannot have positive dimension. This proves that generically, there are eight solutions counted with multiplicity. Since it is possible to exhibit a configuration where the eight solutions are distinct, the generic configuration must have all eight solutions distinct.

Radii edit

In the generic problem with eight solution circles, The reciprocals of the radii of four of the solution circles sum to the same value as do the reciprocals of the radii of the other four solution circles [40]

Special cases edit

Ten combinations of points, circles, and lines edit

Apollonius problem is to construct one or more circles tangent to three given objects in a plane, which may be circles, points, or lines. This gives rise to ten types of Apollonius' problem, one corresponding to each combination of circles, lines and points, which may be labeled with three letters, either C, L, or P, to denote whether the given elements are a circle, line or point, respectively (Table 1).[32] As an example, the type of Apollonius problem with a given circle, line, and point is denoted as CLP.

Some of these special cases are much easier to solve than the general case of three given circles. The two simplest cases are the problems of drawing a circle through three given points (PPP) or tangent to three lines (LLL), which were solved first by Euclid in his Elements. For example, the PPP problem can be solved as follows. The center of the solution circle is equally distant from all three points, and therefore must lie on the perpendicular bisector line of any two. Hence, the center is the point of intersection of any two perpendicular bisectors. Similarly, in the LLL case, the center must lie on a line bisecting the angle at the three intersection points between the three given lines; hence, the center lies at the intersection point of two such angle bisectors. Since there are two such bisectors at every intersection point of the three given lines, there are four solutions to the general LLL problem (the incircle and excircles of the triangle formed by the three lines).

Points and lines may be viewed as special cases of circles; a point can be considered as a circle of infinitely small radius, and a line may be thought of an infinitely large circle whose center is also at infinity. From this perspective, the general Apollonius problem is that of constructing circles tangent to three given circles. The nine other cases involving points and lines may be viewed as limiting cases of the general problem.[32][12] These limiting cases often have fewer solutions than the general problem; for example, the replacement of a given circle by a given point halves the number of solutions, since a point can be construed as an infinitesimal circle that is either internally or externally tangent.

Table 1: Ten Types of Apollonius' Problem
Index Code Given Elements Number of solutions
(in general)
Example
(solution in pink; given objects in black)
1 PPP three points 1  
2 LPP one line and two points 2  
3 LLP two lines and a point 2  
4 CPP one circle and two points 2  
5 LLL three lines 4  
6 CLP one circle, one line, and a point 4  
7 CCP two circles and a point 4  
8 CLL one circle and two lines 8  
9 CCL two circles and a line 8  
10 CCC three circles (the classic problem) 8  

Number of solutions edit

 
Figure 11: An Apollonius problem with no solutions. A solution circle (pink) must cross the dashed given circle (black) to touch both of the other given circles (also black).

The problem of counting the number of solutions to different types of Apollonius' problem belongs to the field of enumerative geometry.[12][41] The general number of solutions for each of the ten types of Apollonius' problem is given in Table 1 above. However, special arrangements of the given elements may change the number of solutions. For illustration, Apollonius' problem has no solution if one circle separates the two (Figure 11); to touch both the solid given circles, the solution circle would have to cross the dashed given circle; but that it cannot do, if it is to touch the dashed circle tangentially. Conversely, if three given circles are all tangent at the same point, then any circle tangent at the same point is a solution; such Apollonius problems have an infinite number of solutions. If any of the given circles are identical, there is likewise an infinity of solutions. If only two given circles are identical, there are only two distinct given circles; the centers of the solution circles form a hyperbola, as used in one solution to Apollonius' problem.

An exhaustive enumeration of the number of solutions for all possible configurations of three given circles, points or lines was first undertaken by Muirhead in 1896,[42] although earlier work had been done by Stoll[43] and Study.[44] However, Muirhead's work was incomplete; it was extended in 1974[45] and a definitive enumeration, with 33 distinct cases, was published in 1983.[12] Although solutions to Apollonius' problem generally occur in pairs related by inversion, an odd number of solutions is possible in some cases, e.g., the single solution for PPP, or when one or three of the given circles are themselves solutions. (An example of the latter is given in the section on Descartes' theorem.) However, there are no Apollonius problems with seven solutions.[34][43] Alternative solutions based on the geometry of circles and spheres have been developed and used in higher dimensions.[26][35]

Mutually tangent given circles: Soddy's circles and Descartes' theorem edit

If the three given circles are mutually tangent, Apollonius' problem has five solutions. Three solutions are the given circles themselves, since each is tangent to itself and to the other two given circles. The remaining two solutions (shown in red in Figure 12) correspond to the inscribed and circumscribed circles, and are called Soddy's circles.[46] This special case of Apollonius' problem is also known as the four coins problem.[47] The three given circles of this Apollonius problem form a Steiner chain tangent to the two Soddy's circles.

 
Figure 12: The two solutions (red) to Apollonius' problem with mutually tangent given circles (black), labeled by their curvatures.

Either Soddy circle, when taken together with the three given circles, produces a set of four circles that are mutually tangent at six points. The radii of these four circles are related by an equation known as Descartes' theorem. In a 1643 letter to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia,[48] René Descartes showed that

 

where ks = 1/rs and rs are the curvature and radius of the solution circle, respectively, and similarly for the curvatures k1, k2 and k3 and radii r1, r2 and r3 of the three given circles. For every set of four mutually tangent circles, there is a second set of four mutually tangent circles that are tangent at the same six points.[2][49]

Descartes' theorem was rediscovered independently in 1826 by Jakob Steiner,[50] in 1842 by Philip Beecroft,[2][49] and again in 1936 by Frederick Soddy.[51] Soddy published his findings in the scientific journal Nature as a poem, The Kiss Precise, of which the first two stanzas are reproduced below. The first stanza describes Soddy's circles, whereas the second stanza gives Descartes' theorem. In Soddy's poem, two circles are said to "kiss" if they are tangent, whereas the term "bend" refers to the curvature k of the circle.

For pairs of lips to kiss maybe
Involves no trigonometry.
'Tis not so when four circles kiss
Each one the other three.
To bring this off the four must be
As three in one or one in three.
If one in three, beyond a doubt
Each gets three kisses from without.
If three in one, then is that one
Thrice kissed internally.

Four circles to the kissing come.
The smaller are the benter.
The bend is just the inverse of
The distance from the center.
Though their intrigue left Euclid dumb
There's now no need for rule of thumb.
Since zero bend's a dead straight line
And concave bends have minus sign,
The sum of the squares of all four bends
Is half the square of their sum.

Sundry extensions of Descartes' theorem have been derived by Daniel Pedoe.[52]

Generalizations edit

Apollonius' problem can be extended to construct all the circles that intersect three given circles at a precise angle θ, or at three specified crossing angles θ1, θ2 and θ3;[50] the ordinary Apollonius' problem corresponds to a special case in which the crossing angle is zero for all three given circles. Another generalization is the dual of the first extension, namely, to construct circles with three specified tangential distances from the three given circles.[26]

 
Figure 13: A symmetrical Apollonian gasket, also called the Leibniz packing, after its inventor Gottfried Leibniz.

Apollonius' problem can be extended from the plane to the sphere and other quadratic surfaces. For the sphere, the problem is to construct all the circles (the boundaries of spherical caps) that are tangent to three given circles on the sphere.[24][53][54] This spherical problem can be rendered into a corresponding planar problem using stereographic projection. Once the solutions to the planar problem have been constructed, the corresponding solutions to the spherical problem can be determined by inverting the stereographic projection. Even more generally, one can consider the problem of four tangent curves that result from the intersections of an arbitrary quadratic surface and four planes, a problem first considered by Charles Dupin.[9]

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.[55] This gasket is a fractal, being self-similar and having a dimension d that is not known exactly but is roughly 1.3,[56] 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.[57] The Apollonian gasket also has deep connections to other fields of mathematics; for example, it is the limit set of Kleinian groups.[58]

The configuration of a circle tangent to four circles in the plane has special properties, which have been elucidated by Larmor (1891)[59] and Lachlan (1893).[60] Such a configuration is also the basis for Casey's theorem,[17] itself a generalization of Ptolemy's theorem.[37]

The extension of Apollonius' problem to three dimensions, namely, the problem of finding a fifth sphere that is tangent to four given spheres, can be solved by analogous methods.[9] For example, the given and solution spheres can be resized so that one given sphere is shrunk to point while maintaining tangency.[38] Inversion in this point reduces Apollonius' problem to finding a plane that is tangent to three given spheres. There are in general eight such planes, which become the solutions to the original problem by reversing the inversion and the resizing. This problem was first considered by Pierre de Fermat,[61] and many alternative solution methods have been developed over the centuries.[62]

Apollonius' problem can even be extended to d dimensions, to construct the hyperspheres tangent to a given set of d + 1 hyperspheres.[41] Following the publication of Frederick Soddy's re-derivation of the Descartes theorem in 1936, several people solved (independently) the mutually tangent case corresponding to Soddy's circles in d dimensions.[63]

Applications edit

The principal application of Apollonius' problem, as formulated by Isaac Newton, is hyperbolic trilateration, which seeks to determine a position from the differences in distances to at least three points.[8] For example, a ship may seek to determine its position from the differences in arrival times of signals from three synchronized transmitters. Solutions to Apollonius' problem were used in World War I to determine the location of an artillery piece from the time a gunshot was heard at three different positions,[9] and hyperbolic trilateration is the principle used by the Decca Navigator System and LORAN.[7] Similarly, the location of an aircraft may be determined from the difference in arrival times of its transponder signal at four receiving stations. This multilateration problem is equivalent to the three-dimensional generalization of Apollonius' problem and applies to global navigation satellite systems (see GPS#Geometric interpretation).[31] It is also used to determine the position of calling animals (such as birds and whales), although Apollonius' problem does not pertain if the speed of sound varies with direction (i.e., the transmission medium not isotropic).[64]

Apollonius' problem has other applications. In Book 1, Proposition 21 in his Principia, Isaac Newton used his solution of Apollonius' problem to construct an orbit in celestial mechanics from the center of attraction and observations of tangent lines to the orbit corresponding to instantaneous velocity.[9] The special case of the problem of Apollonius when all three circles are tangent is used in the Hardy–Littlewood circle method of analytic number theory to construct Hans Rademacher's contour for complex integration, given by the boundaries of an infinite set of Ford circles each of which touches several others.[65] Finally, Apollonius' problem has been applied to some types of packing problems, which arise in disparate fields such as the error-correcting codes used on DVDs and the design of pharmaceuticals that bind in a particular enzyme of a pathogenic bacterium.[66]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Boyd, DW (1973). "The osculatory packing of a three-dimensional sphere". Canadian Journal of Mathematics. 25 (2): 303–322. doi:10.4153/CJM-1973-030-5. S2CID 120042053.
  • Callandreau, Édouard (1949). Célèbres problèmes mathématiques (in French). Paris: Albin Michel. pp. 219–226. OCLC 61042170.
  • Camerer, JG (1795). Apollonii de Tactionibus, quae supersunt, ac maxime lemmata Pappi, in hos libros Graece nunc primum edita, e codicibus manuscriptis, cum Vietae librorum Apollonii restitutione, adjectis observationibus, computationibus, ac problematis Apolloniani historia (in Latin). Gothae: Ettinger.
  • Gisch D, Ribando JM (2004). "Apollonius' Problem: A Study of Solutions and Their Connections" (PDF). American Journal of Undergraduate Research. 3: 15–25. doi:10.33697/ajur.2004.010.
  • Pappus of Alexandria (1933). Pappus d'Alexandrie: La collection mathématique (in French). Paris. OCLC 67245614.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Trans., introd., and notes by Paul Ver Eecke.
  • Simon, M (1906). Über die Entwicklung der Elementargeometrie im XIX. Jahrhundert (in German). Berlin: Teubner. pp. 97–105.
  • Wells, D (1991). The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry. New York: Penguin Books. pp. 3–5. ISBN 0-14-011813-6.

External links edit

  • "Ask Dr. Math solution". Mathforum. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Apollonius' problem". MathWorld.
  • "Apollonius' Problem". Cut The Knot. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
  • Kunkel, Paul. "Tangent Circles". Whistler Alley. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
  • Austin, David (March 2006). "When kissing involves trigonometry". Feature Column at the American Mathematical Society website. Retrieved 2008-05-05.

problem, apollonius, euclidean, plane, geometry, apollonius, problem, construct, circles, that, tangent, three, given, circles, plane, figure, apollonius, perga, posed, solved, this, famous, problem, work, Ἐπαφαί, epaphaí, tangencies, this, work, been, lost, c. In Euclidean plane geometry Apollonius s problem is to construct circles that are tangent to three given circles in a plane Figure 1 Apollonius of Perga c 262 BC c 190 BC posed and solved this famous problem in his work Ἐpafai Epaphai Tangencies this work has been lost but a 4th century AD report of his results by Pappus of Alexandria has survived Three given circles generically have eight different circles that are tangent to them Figure 2 a pair of solutions for each way to divide the three given circles in two subsets there are 4 ways to divide a set of cardinality 3 in 2 parts Figure 1 A solution in purple to Apollonius s problem The given circles are shown in black Figure 2 Four complementary pairs of solutions to Apollonius s problem the given circles are black In the 16th century Adriaan van Roomen solved the problem using intersecting hyperbolas but this solution does not use only straightedge and compass constructions Francois Viete found such a solution by exploiting limiting cases any of the three given circles can be shrunk to zero radius a point or expanded to infinite radius a line Viete s approach which uses simpler limiting cases to solve more complicated ones is considered a plausible reconstruction of Apollonius method The method of van Roomen was simplified by Isaac Newton who showed that Apollonius problem is equivalent to finding a position from the differences of its distances to three known points This has applications in navigation and positioning systems such as LORAN Later mathematicians introduced algebraic methods which transform a geometric problem into algebraic equations These methods were simplified by exploiting symmetries inherent in the problem of Apollonius for instance solution circles generically occur in pairs with one solution enclosing the given circles that the other excludes Figure 2 Joseph Diaz Gergonne used this symmetry to provide an elegant straightedge and compass solution while other mathematicians used geometrical transformations such as reflection in a circle to simplify the configuration of the given circles These developments provide a geometrical setting for algebraic methods using Lie sphere geometry and a classification of solutions according to 33 essentially different configurations of the given circles Apollonius problem has stimulated much further work Generalizations to three dimensions constructing a sphere tangent to four given spheres and beyond have been studied The configuration of three mutually tangent circles has received particular attention Rene Descartes gave a formula relating the radii of the solution circles and the given circles now known as Descartes theorem Solving Apollonius problem iteratively in this case leads to the Apollonian gasket which is one of the earliest fractals to be described in print and is important in number theory via Ford circles and the Hardy Littlewood circle method Contents 1 Statement of the problem 2 History 3 Solution methods 3 1 Intersecting hyperbolas 3 2 Viete s reconstruction 3 3 Algebraic solutions 3 4 Lie sphere geometry 3 5 Inversive methods 3 6 Pairs of solutions by inversion 3 6 1 Inversion to an annulus 3 6 2 Resizing and inversion 3 6 2 1 Shrinking one given circle to a point 3 6 2 2 Resizing two given circles to tangency 3 7 Gergonne s solution 3 8 Intersection theory 4 Radii 5 Special cases 5 1 Ten combinations of points circles and lines 5 2 Number of solutions 5 3 Mutually tangent given circles Soddy s circles and Descartes theorem 6 Generalizations 7 Applications 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksStatement of the problem editThe general statement of Apollonius problem is to construct one or more circles that are tangent to three given objects in a plane where an object may be a line a point or a circle of any size 1 2 3 4 These objects may be arranged in any way and may cross one another however they are usually taken to be distinct meaning that they do not coincide Solutions to Apollonius problem are sometimes called Apollonius circles although the term is also used for other types of circles associated with Apollonius The property of tangency is defined as follows First a point line or circle is assumed to be tangent to itself hence if a given circle is already tangent to the other two given objects it is counted as a solution to Apollonius problem Two distinct geometrical objects are said to intersect if they have a point in common By definition a point is tangent to a circle or a line if it intersects them that is if it lies on them thus two distinct points cannot be tangent If the angle between lines or circles at an intersection point is zero they are said to be tangent the intersection point is called a tangent point or a point of tangency The word tangent derives from the Latin present participle tangens meaning touching In practice two distinct circles are tangent if they intersect at only one point if they intersect at zero or two points they are not tangent The same holds true for a line and a circle Two distinct lines cannot be tangent in the plane although two parallel lines can be considered as tangent at a point at infinity in inversive geometry see below 5 6 The solution circle may be either internally or externally tangent to each of the given circles An external tangency is one where the two circles bend away from each other at their point of contact they lie on opposite sides of the tangent line at that point and they exclude one another The distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii By contrast an internal tangency is one in which the two circles curve in the same way at their point of contact the two circles lie on the same side of the tangent line and one circle encloses the other In this case the distance between their centers equals the difference of their radii As an illustration in Figure 1 the pink solution circle is internally tangent to the medium sized given black circle on the right whereas it is externally tangent to the smallest and largest given circles on the left Apollonius problem can also be formulated as the problem of locating one or more points such that the differences of its distances to three given points equal three known values Consider a solution circle of radius rs and three given circles of radii r1 r2 and r3 If the solution circle is externally tangent to all three given circles the distances between the center of the solution circle and the centers of the given circles equal d1 r1 rs d2 r2 rs and d3 r3 rs respectively Therefore differences in these distances are constants such as d1 d2 r1 r2 they depend only on the known radii of the given circles and not on the radius rs of the solution circle which cancels out This second formulation of Apollonius problem can be generalized to internally tangent solution circles for which the center center distance equals the difference of radii by changing the corresponding differences of distances to sums of distances so that the solution circle radius rs again cancels out The re formulation in terms of center center distances is useful in the solutions below of Adriaan van Roomen and Isaac Newton and also in hyperbolic positioning or trilateration which is the task of locating a position from differences in distances to three known points For example navigation systems such as LORAN identify a receiver s position from the differences in arrival times of signals from three fixed positions which correspond to the differences in distances to those transmitters 7 8 History editA rich repertoire of geometrical and algebraic methods have been developed to solve Apollonius problem 9 10 which has been called the most famous of all geometry problems 3 The original approach of Apollonius of Perga has been lost but reconstructions have been offered by Francois Viete and others based on the clues in the description by Pappus of Alexandria 11 12 The first new solution method was published in 1596 by Adriaan van Roomen who identified the centers of the solution circles as the intersection points of two hyperbolas 13 14 Van Roomen s method was refined in 1687 by Isaac Newton in his Principia 15 16 and by John Casey in 1881 17 Although successful in solving Apollonius problem van Roomen s method has a drawback A prized property in classical Euclidean geometry is the ability to solve problems using only a compass and a straightedge 18 Many constructions are impossible using only these tools such as dividing an angle in three equal parts However many such impossible problems can be solved by intersecting curves such as hyperbolas ellipses and parabolas conic sections For example doubling the cube the problem of constructing a cube of twice the volume of a given cube cannot be done using only a straightedge and compass but Menaechmus showed that the problem can be solved by using the intersections of two parabolas 19 Therefore van Roomen s solution which uses the intersection of two hyperbolas did not determine if the problem satisfied the straightedge and compass property Van Roomen s friend Francois Viete who had urged van Roomen to work on Apollonius problem in the first place developed a method that used only compass and straightedge 20 Prior to Viete s solution Regiomontanus doubted whether Apollonius problem could be solved by straightedge and compass 21 Viete first solved some simple special cases of Apollonius problem such as finding a circle that passes through three given points which has only one solution if the points are distinct he then built up to solving more complicated special cases in some cases by shrinking or swelling the given circles 1 According to the 4th century report of Pappus Apollonius own book on this problem entitled Ἐpafai Epaphai Tangencies Latin De tactionibus De contactibus followed a similar progressive approach 11 Hence Viete s solution is considered to be a plausible reconstruction of Apollonius solution although other reconstructions have been published independently by three different authors 22 Several other geometrical solutions to Apollonius problem were developed in the 19th century The most notable solutions are those of Jean Victor Poncelet 1811 23 and of Joseph Diaz Gergonne 1814 24 Whereas Poncelet s proof relies on homothetic centers of circles and the power of a point theorem Gergonne s method exploits the conjugate relation between lines and their poles in a circle Methods using circle inversion were pioneered by Julius Petersen in 1879 25 one example is the annular solution method of HSM Coxeter 2 Another approach uses Lie sphere geometry 26 which was developed by Sophus Lie Algebraic solutions to Apollonius problem were pioneered in the 17th century by Rene Descartes and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia although their solutions were rather complex 9 Practical algebraic methods were developed in the late 18th and 19th centuries by several mathematicians including Leonhard Euler 27 Nicolas Fuss 9 Carl Friedrich Gauss 28 Lazare Carnot 29 and Augustin Louis Cauchy 30 Solution methods editIntersecting hyperbolas edit nbsp Figure 3 Two given circles black and a circle tangent to both pink The center to center distances d1 and d2 equal r1 rs and r2 rs respectively so their difference is independent of rs The solution of Adriaan van Roomen 1596 is based on the intersection of two hyperbolas 13 14 Let the given circles be denoted as C1 C2 and C3 Van Roomen solved the general problem by solving a simpler problem that of finding the circles that are tangent to two given circles such as C1 and C2 He noted that the center of a circle tangent to both given circles must lie on a hyperbola whose foci are the centers of the given circles To understand this let the radii of the solution circle and the two given circles be denoted as rs r1 and r2 respectively Figure 3 The distance d1 between the centers of the solution circle and C1 is either rs r1 or rs r1 depending on whether these circles are chosen to be externally or internally tangent respectively Similarly the distance d2 between the centers of the solution circle and C2 is either rs r2 or rs r2 again depending on their chosen tangency Thus the difference d1 d2 between these distances is always a constant that is independent of rs This property of having a fixed difference between the distances to the foci characterizes hyperbolas so the possible centers of the solution circle lie on a hyperbola A second hyperbola can be drawn for the pair of given circles C2 and C3 where the internal or external tangency of the solution and C2 should be chosen consistently with that of the first hyperbola An intersection of these two hyperbolas if any gives the center of a solution circle that has the chosen internal and external tangencies to the three given circles The full set of solutions to Apollonius problem can be found by considering all possible combinations of internal and external tangency of the solution circle to the three given circles Isaac Newton 1687 refined van Roomen s solution so that the solution circle centers were located at the intersections of a line with a circle 15 Newton formulates Apollonius problem as a problem in trilateration to locate a point Z from three given points A B and C such that the differences in distances from Z to the three given points have known values 31 These four points correspond to the center of the solution circle Z and the centers of the three given circles A B and C nbsp The set of points with a constant ratio of distances d1 d2 to two fixed points is a circle Instead of solving for the two hyperbolas Newton constructs their directrix lines instead For any hyperbola the ratio of distances from a point Z to a focus A and to the directrix is a fixed constant called the eccentricity The two directrices intersect at a point T and from their two known distance ratios Newton constructs a line passing through T on which Z must lie However the ratio of distances TZ TA is also known hence Z also lies on a known circle since Apollonius had shown that a circle can be defined as the set of points that have a given ratio of distances to two fixed points As an aside this definition is the basis of bipolar coordinates Thus the solutions to Apollonius problem are the intersections of a line with a circle Viete s reconstruction edit As described below Apollonius problem has ten special cases depending on the nature of the three given objects which may be a circle C line L or point P By custom these ten cases are distinguished by three letter codes such as CCP 32 Viete solved all ten of these cases using only compass and straightedge constructions and used the solutions of simpler cases to solve the more complex cases 1 20 nbsp Figure 4 Tangency between circles is preserved if their radii are changed by equal amounts A pink solution circle must shrink or swell with an internally tangent circle black circle on the right while externally tangent circles two black circles on left do the opposite Viete began by solving the PPP case three points following the method of Euclid in his Elements From this he derived a lemma corresponding to the power of a point theorem which he used to solve the LPP case a line and two points Following Euclid a second time Viete solved the LLL case three lines using the angle bisectors He then derived a lemma for constructing the line perpendicular to an angle bisector that passes through a point which he used to solve the LLP problem two lines and a point This accounts for the first four cases of Apollonius problem those that do not involve circles To solve the remaining problems Viete exploited the fact that the given circles and the solution circle may be re sized in tandem while preserving their tangencies Figure 4 If the solution circle radius is changed by an amount Dr the radius of its internally tangent given circles must be likewise changed by Dr whereas the radius of its externally tangent given circles must be changed by Dr Thus as the solution circle swells the internally tangent given circles must swell in tandem whereas the externally tangent given circles must shrink to maintain their tangencies Viete used this approach to shrink one of the given circles to a point thus reducing the problem to a simpler already solved case He first solved the CLL case a circle and two lines by shrinking the circle into a point rendering it an LLP case He then solved the CLP case a circle a line and a point using three lemmas Again shrinking one circle to a point Viete transformed the CCL case into a CLP case He then solved the CPP case a circle and two points and the CCP case two circles and a point the latter case by two lemmas Finally Viete solved the general CCC case three circles by shrinking one circle to a point rendering it a CCP case Algebraic solutions edit Apollonius problem can be framed as a system of three equations for the center and radius of the solution circle 33 Since the three given circles and any solution circle must lie in the same plane their positions can be specified in terms of the x y coordinates of their centers For example the center positions of the three given circles may be written as x1 y1 x2 y2 and x3 y3 whereas that of a solution circle can be written as xs ys Similarly the radii of the given circles and a solution circle can be written as r1 r2 r3 and rs respectively The requirement that a solution circle must exactly touch each of the three given circles can be expressed as three coupled quadratic equations for xs ys and rs xs x1 2 ys y1 2 rs s1r1 2 displaystyle left x s x 1 right 2 left y s y 1 right 2 left r s s 1 r 1 right 2 nbsp xs x2 2 ys y2 2 rs s2r2 2 displaystyle left x s x 2 right 2 left y s y 2 right 2 left r s s 2 r 2 right 2 nbsp xs x3 2 ys y3 2 rs s3r3 2 displaystyle left x s x 3 right 2 left y s y 3 right 2 left r s s 3 r 3 right 2 nbsp The three numbers s1 s2 and s3 on the right hand side called signs may equal 1 and specify whether the desired solution circle should touch the corresponding given circle internally s 1 or externally s 1 For example in Figures 1 and 4 the pink solution is internally tangent to the medium sized given circle on the right and externally tangent to the smallest and largest given circles on the left if the given circles are ordered by radius the signs for this solution are Since the three signs may be chosen independently there are eight possible sets of equations 2 2 2 8 each set corresponding to one of the eight types of solution circles The general system of three equations may be solved by the method of resultants When multiplied out all three equations have xs2 ys2 on the left hand side and rs2 on the right hand side Subtracting one equation from another eliminates these quadratic terms the remaining linear terms may be re arranged to yield formulae for the coordinates xs and ys xs M Nrs displaystyle x s M Nr s nbsp ys P Qrs displaystyle y s P Qr s nbsp where M N P and Q are known functions of the given circles and the choice of signs Substitution of these formulae into one of the initial three equations gives a quadratic equation for rs which can be solved by the quadratic formula Substitution of the numerical value of rs into the linear formulae yields the corresponding values of xs and ys The signs s1 s2 and s3 on the right hand sides of the equations may be chosen in eight possible ways and each choice of signs gives up to two solutions since the equation for rs is quadratic This might suggest incorrectly that there are up to sixteen solutions of Apollonius problem However due to a symmetry of the equations if rs xs ys is a solution with signs si then so is rs xs ys with opposite signs si which represents the same solution circle Therefore Apollonius problem has at most eight independent solutions Figure 2 One way to avoid this double counting is to consider only solution circles with non negative radius The two roots of any quadratic equation may be of three possible types two different real numbers two identical real numbers i e a degenerate double root or a pair of complex conjugate roots The first case corresponds to the usual situation each pair of roots corresponds to a pair of solutions that are related by circle inversion as described below Figure 6 In the second case both roots are identical corresponding to a solution circle that transforms into itself under inversion In this case one of the given circles is itself a solution to the Apollonius problem and the number of distinct solutions is reduced by one The third case of complex conjugate radii does not correspond to a geometrically possible solution for Apollonius problem since a solution circle cannot have an imaginary radius therefore the number of solutions is reduced by two Apollonius problem cannot have seven solutions although it may have any other number of solutions from zero to eight 12 34 Lie sphere geometry edit The same algebraic equations can be derived in the context of Lie sphere geometry 26 That geometry represents circles lines and points in a unified way as a five dimensional vector X v cx cy w sr where c cx cy is the center of the circle and r is its non negative radius If r is not zero the sign s may be positive or negative for visualization s represents the orientation of the circle with counterclockwise circles having a positive s and clockwise circles having a negative s The parameter w is zero for a straight line and one otherwise In this five dimensional world there is a bilinear product similar to the dot product X1 X2 v1w2 v2w1 c1 c2 s1s2r1r2 displaystyle left X 1 mid X 2 right v 1 w 2 v 2 w 1 mathbf c 1 cdot mathbf c 2 s 1 s 2 r 1 r 2 nbsp The Lie quadric is defined as those vectors whose product with themselves their square norm is zero X X 0 Let X1 and X2 be two vectors belonging to this quadric the norm of their difference equals X1 X2 X1 X2 2 v1 v2 w1 w2 c1 c2 c1 c2 s1r1 s2r2 2 displaystyle left X 1 X 2 mid X 1 X 2 right 2 left v 1 v 2 right left w 1 w 2 right left mathbf c 1 mathbf c 2 right cdot left mathbf c 1 mathbf c 2 right left s 1 r 1 s 2 r 2 right 2 nbsp The product distributes over addition and subtraction more precisely it is bilinear X1 X2 X1 X2 X1 X1 2 X1 X2 X2 X2 displaystyle left X 1 X 2 mid X 1 X 2 right left X 1 mid X 1 right 2 left X 1 mid X 2 right left X 2 mid X 2 right nbsp Since X1 X1 X2 X2 0 both belong to the Lie quadric and since w1 w2 1 for circles the product of any two such vectors on the quadric equals 2 X1 X2 c1 c2 2 s1r1 s2r2 2 displaystyle 2 left X 1 mid X 2 right left mathbf c 1 mathbf c 2 right 2 left s 1 r 1 s 2 r 2 right 2 nbsp where the vertical bars sandwiching c1 c2 represent the length of that difference vector i e the Euclidean norm This formula shows that if two quadric vectors X1 and X2 are orthogonal perpendicular to one another that is if X1 X2 0 then their corresponding circles are tangent For if the two signs s1 and s2 are the same i e the circles have the same orientation the circles are internally tangent the distance between their centers equals the difference in the radii c1 c2 2 r1 r2 2 displaystyle left mathbf c 1 mathbf c 2 right 2 left r 1 r 2 right 2 nbsp Conversely if the two signs s1 and s2 are different i e the circles have opposite orientations the circles are externally tangent the distance between their centers equals the sum of the radii c1 c2 2 r1 r2 2 displaystyle left mathbf c 1 mathbf c 2 right 2 left r 1 r 2 right 2 nbsp Therefore Apollonius problem can be re stated in Lie geometry as a problem of finding perpendicular vectors on the Lie quadric specifically the goal is to identify solution vectors Xsol that belong to the Lie quadric and are also orthogonal perpendicular to the vectors X1 X2 and X3 corresponding to the given circles Xsol Xsol Xsol X1 Xsol X2 Xsol X3 0 displaystyle left X mathrm sol mid X mathrm sol right left X mathrm sol mid X 1 right left X mathrm sol mid X 2 right left X mathrm sol mid X 3 right 0 nbsp The advantage of this re statement is that one can exploit theorems from linear algebra on the maximum number of linearly independent simultaneously perpendicular vectors This gives another way to calculate the maximum number of solutions and extend the theorem to higher dimensional spaces 26 35 Inversive methods edit nbsp Figure 5 Inversion in a circle The point P is the inverse of point P with respect to the circle A natural setting for problem of Apollonius is inversive geometry 4 12 The basic strategy of inversive methods is to transform a given Apollonius problem into another Apollonius problem that is simpler to solve the solutions to the original problem are found from the solutions of the transformed problem by undoing the transformation Candidate transformations must change one Apollonius problem into another therefore they must transform the given points circles and lines to other points circles and lines and no other shapes Circle inversion has this property and allows the center and radius of the inversion circle to be chosen judiciously Other candidates include the Euclidean plane isometries however they do not simplify the problem since they merely shift rotate and mirror the original problem Inversion in a circle with center O and radius R consists of the following operation Figure 5 every point P is mapped into a new point P such that O P and P are collinear and the product of the distances of P and P to the center O equal the radius R squared OP OP R2 displaystyle overline mathbf OP cdot overline mathbf OP prime R 2 nbsp Thus if P lies outside the circle then P lies within and vice versa When P is the same as O the inversion is said to send P to infinity In complex analysis infinity is defined in terms of the Riemann sphere Inversion has the useful property that lines and circles are always transformed into lines and circles and points are always transformed into points Circles are generally transformed into other circles under inversion however if a circle passes through the center of the inversion circle it is transformed into a straight line and vice versa Importantly if a circle crosses the circle of inversion at right angles intersects perpendicularly it is left unchanged by the inversion it is transformed into itself Circle inversions correspond to a subset of Mobius transformations on the Riemann sphere The planar Apollonius problem can be transferred to the sphere by an inverse stereographic projection hence solutions of the planar Apollonius problem also pertain to its counterpart on the sphere Other inversive solutions to the planar problem are possible besides the common ones described below 36 Pairs of solutions by inversion edit nbsp Figure 6 A conjugate pair of solutions to Apollonius s problem pink circles with given circles in black Solutions to Apollonius s problem generally occur in pairs for each solution circle there is a conjugate solution circle Figure 6 1 One solution circle excludes the given circles that are enclosed by its conjugate solution and vice versa For example in Figure 6 one solution circle pink upper left encloses two given circles black but excludes a third conversely its conjugate solution also pink lower right encloses that third given circle but excludes the other two The two conjugate solution circles are related by inversion by the following argument In general any three distinct circles have a unique circle the radical circle that intersects all of them perpendicularly the center of that circle is the radical center of the three circles 4 For illustration the orange circle in Figure 6 crosses the black given circles at right angles Inversion in the radical circle leaves the given circles unchanged but transforms the two conjugate pink solution circles into one another Under the same inversion the corresponding points of tangency of the two solution circles are transformed into one another for illustration in Figure 6 the two blue points lying on each green line are transformed into one another Hence the lines connecting these conjugate tangent points are invariant under the inversion therefore they must pass through the center of inversion which is the radical center green lines intersecting at the orange dot in Figure 6 Inversion to an annulus edit If two of the three given circles do not intersect a center of inversion can be chosen so that those two given circles become concentric 2 12 Under this inversion the solution circles must fall within the annulus between the two concentric circles Therefore they belong to two one parameter families In the first family Figure 7 the solutions do not enclose the inner concentric circle but rather revolve like ball bearings in the annulus In the second family Figure 8 the solution circles enclose the inner concentric circle There are generally four solutions for each family yielding eight possible solutions consistent with the algebraic solution nbsp Figure 7 A solution circle pink in the first family lies between concentric given circles black Twice the solution radius rs equals the difference router rinner of the inner and outer radii while twice its center distance ds equals their sum nbsp Figure 8 A solution circle pink in the second family encloses the inner given circle black Twice the solution radius rs equals the sum router rinner of the inner and outer radii while twice its center distance ds equals their difference When two of the given circles are concentric Apollonius s problem can be solved easily using a method of Gauss 28 The radii of the three given circles are known as is the distance dnon from the common concentric center to the non concentric circle Figure 7 The solution circle can be determined from its radius rs the angle 8 and the distances ds and dT from its center to the common concentric center and the center of the non concentric circle respectively The radius and distance ds are known Figure 7 and the distance dT rs rnon depending on whether the solution circle is internally or externally tangent to the non concentric circle Therefore by the law of cosines cos 8 ds2 dnon2 dT22dsdnon C displaystyle cos theta frac d mathrm s 2 d mathrm non 2 d mathrm T 2 2d mathrm s d mathrm non equiv C pm nbsp Here a new constant C has been defined for brevity with the subscript indicating whether the solution is externally or internally tangent A simple trigonometric rearrangement yields the four solutions 8 2arctan 1 C1 C displaystyle theta pm 2 arctan left sqrt frac 1 C 1 C right nbsp This formula represents four solutions corresponding to the two choices of the sign of 8 and the two choices for C The remaining four solutions can be obtained by the same method using the substitutions for rs and ds indicated in Figure 8 Thus all eight solutions of the general Apollonius problem can be found by this method Any initial two disjoint given circles can be rendered concentric as follows The radical axis of the two given circles is constructed choosing two arbitrary points P and Q on this radical axis two circles can be constructed that are centered on P and Q and that intersect the two given circles orthogonally These two constructed circles intersect each other in two points Inversion in one such intersection point F renders the constructed circles into straight lines emanating from F and the two given circles into concentric circles with the third given circle becoming another circle in general This follows because the system of circles is equivalent to a set of Apollonian circles forming a bipolar coordinate system Resizing and inversion edit The usefulness of inversion can be increased significantly by resizing 37 38 As noted in Viete s reconstruction the three given circles and the solution circle can be resized in tandem while preserving their tangencies Thus the initial Apollonius problem is transformed into another problem that may be easier to solve For example the four circles can be resized so that one given circle is shrunk to a point alternatively two given circles can often be resized so that they are tangent to one another Thirdly given circles that intersect can be resized so that they become non intersecting after which the method for inverting to an annulus can be applied In all such cases the solution of the original Apollonius problem is obtained from the solution of the transformed problem by undoing the resizing and inversion Shrinking one given circle to a point edit In the first approach the given circles are shrunk or swelled appropriately to their tangency until one given circle is shrunk to a point P 37 In that case Apollonius problem degenerates to the CCP limiting case which is the problem of finding a solution circle tangent to the two remaining given circles that passes through the point P Inversion in a circle centered on P transforms the two given circles into new circles and the solution circle into a line Therefore the transformed solution is a line that is tangent to the two transformed given circles There are four such solution lines which may be constructed from the external and internal homothetic centers of the two circles Re inversion in P and undoing the resizing transforms such a solution line into the desired solution circle of the original Apollonius problem All eight general solutions can be obtained by shrinking and swelling the circles according to the differing internal and external tangencies of each solution however different given circles may be shrunk to a point for different solutions Resizing two given circles to tangency edit In the second approach the radii of the given circles are modified appropriately by an amount Dr so that two of them are tangential touching 38 Their point of tangency is chosen as the center of inversion in a circle that intersects each of the two touching circles in two places Upon inversion the touching circles become two parallel lines Their only point of intersection is sent to infinity under inversion so they cannot meet The same inversion transforms the third circle into another circle The solution of the inverted problem must either be 1 a straight line parallel to the two given parallel lines and tangent to the transformed third given circle or 2 a circle of constant radius that is tangent to the two given parallel lines and the transformed given circle Re inversion and adjusting the radii of all circles by Dr produces a solution circle tangent to the original three circles Gergonne s solution edit nbsp Figure 9 The two tangent lines of the two tangent points of a given circle intersect on the radical axis R red line of the two solution circles pink The three points of intersection on R are the poles of the lines connecting the blue tangent points in each given circle black Gergonne s approach is to consider the solution circles in pairs 1 Let a pair of solution circles be denoted as CA and CB the pink circles in Figure 6 and let their tangent points with the three given circles be denoted as A1 A2 A3 and B1 B2 B3 respectively Gergonne s solution aims to locate these six points and thus solve for the two solution circles Gergonne s insight was that if a line L1 could be constructed such that A1 and B1 were guaranteed to fall on it those two points could be identified as the intersection points of L1 with the given circle C1 Figure 6 The remaining four tangent points would be located similarly by finding lines L2 and L3 that contained A2 and B2 and A3 and B3 respectively To construct a line such as L1 two points must be identified that lie on it but these points need not be the tangent points Gergonne was able to identify two other points for each of the three lines One of the two points has already been identified the radical center G lies on all three lines Figure 6 To locate a second point on the lines L1 L2 and L3 Gergonne noted a reciprocal relationship between those lines and the radical axis R of the solution circles CA and CB To understand this reciprocal relationship consider the two tangent lines to the circle C1 drawn at its tangent points A1 and B1 with the solution circles the intersection of these tangent lines is the pole point of L1 in C1 Since the distances from that pole point to the tangent points A1 and B1 are equal this pole point must also lie on the radical axis R of the solution circles by definition Figure 9 The relationship between pole points and their polar lines is reciprocal if the pole of L1 in C1 lies on R the pole of R in C1 must conversely lie on L1 Thus if we can construct R we can find its pole P1 in C1 giving the needed second point on L1 Figure 10 nbsp Figure 10 The poles red points of the radical axis R in the three given circles black lie on the green lines connecting the tangent points These lines may be constructed from the poles and the radical center orange Gergonne found the radical axis R of the unknown solution circles as follows Any pair of circles has two centers of similarity these two points are the two possible intersections of two tangent lines to the two circles Therefore the three given circles have six centers of similarity two for each distinct pair of given circles Remarkably these six points lie on four lines three points on each line moreover each line corresponds to the radical axis of a potential pair of solution circles To show this Gergonne considered lines through corresponding points of tangency on two of the given circles e g the line defined by A1 A2 and the line defined by B1 B2 Let X3 be a center of similitude for the two circles C1 and C2 then A1 A2 and B1 B2 are pairs of antihomologous points and their lines intersect at X3 It follows therefore that the products of distances are equal X3A1 X3A2 X3B1 X3B2 displaystyle overline X 3 A 1 cdot overline X 3 A 2 overline X 3 B 1 cdot overline X 3 B 2 nbsp which implies that X3 lies on the radical axis of the two solution circles The same argument can be applied to the other pairs of circles so that three centers of similitude for the given three circles must lie on the radical axes of pairs of solution circles In summary the desired line L1 is defined by two points the radical center G of the three given circles and the pole in C1 of one of the four lines connecting the homothetic centers Finding the same pole in C2 and C3 gives L2 and L3 respectively thus all six points can be located from which one pair of solution circles can be found Repeating this procedure for the remaining three homothetic center lines yields six more solutions giving eight solutions in all However if a line Lk does not intersect its circle Ck for some k there is no pair of solutions for that homothetic center line Intersection theory edit The techniques of modern algebraic geometry and in particular intersection theory can be used to solve Apollonius s problem In this approach the problem is reinterpreted as a statement about circles in the complex projective plane Solutions involving complex numbers are allowed and degenerate situations are counted with multiplicity When this is done there are always eight solutions to the problem 39 Every quadratic equation in X Y and Z determines a unique conic its vanishing locus Conversely every conic in the complex projective plane has an equation and that equation is unique up to an overall scaling factor because rescaling an equation does not change its vanishing locus Therefore the set of all conics may be parametrized by five dimensional projective space P5 where the correspondence is X Y Z P2 AX2 BXY CY2 DXZ EYZ FZ2 0 A B C D E F P5 displaystyle X Y Z in mathbf P 2 colon AX 2 BXY CY 2 DXZ EYZ FZ 2 0 leftrightarrow A B C D E F in mathbf P 5 nbsp A circle in the complex projective plane is defined to be a conic that passes through the two points O 1 i 0 and O 1 i 0 where i denotes a square root of 1 The points O and O are called the circular points The projective variety of all circles is the subvariety of P5 consisting of those points which correspond to conics passing through the circular points Substituting the circular points into the equation for a generic conic yields the two equations A Bi C 0 displaystyle A Bi C 0 nbsp A Bi C 0 displaystyle A Bi C 0 nbsp Taking the sum and difference of these equations shows that it is equivalent to impose the conditions A C displaystyle A C nbsp and B 0 displaystyle B 0 nbsp Therefore the variety of all circles is a three dimensional linear subspace of P5 After rescaling and completing the square these equations also demonstrate that every conic passing through the circular points has an equation of the form X aZ 2 Y bZ 2 r2Z2 displaystyle X aZ 2 Y bZ 2 r 2 Z 2 nbsp which is the homogenization of the usual equation of a circle in the affine plane Therefore studying circles in the above sense is nearly equivalent to studying circles in the conventional sense The only difference is that the above sense permits degenerate circles which are the union of two lines The non degenerate circles are called smooth circles while the degenerate ones are called singular circles There are two types of singular circles One is the union of the line at infinity Z 0 with another line in the projective plane possibly the line at infinity again and the other is union of two lines in the projective plane one through each of the two circular points These are the limits of smooth circles as the radius r tends to and 0 respectively In the latter case no point on either of the two lines has real coordinates except for the origin 0 0 1 Let D be a fixed smooth circle If C is any other circle then by the definition of a circle C and D intersect at the circular points O and O Because C and D are conics Bezout s theorem implies C and D intersect in four points total when those points are counted with the proper intersection multiplicity That is there are four points of intersection O O P and Q but some of these points might collide Appolonius problem is concerned with the situation where P Q meaning that the intersection multiplicity at that point is 2 if P is also equal to a circular point this should be interpreted as the intersection multiplicity being 3 Let ZD be the variety of circles tangent to D This variety is a quadric cone in the P3 of all circles To see this consider the incidence correspondence F r C D P3 C is tangent to D at r displaystyle Phi r C in D times mathbf P 3 colon C text is tangent to D text at r nbsp For a curve that is the vanishing locus of a single equation f 0 the condition that the curve meets D at r with multiplicity m means that the Taylor series expansion of f D vanishes to order m at r it is therefore m linear conditions on the coefficients of f This shows that for each r the fiber of F over r is a P1 cut out by two linear equations in the space of circles Consequently F is irreducible of dimension 2 Since it is possible to exhibit a circle that is tangent to D at only a single point a generic element of ZD must be tangent at only a single point Therefore the projection F P2 sending r C to C is a birational morphism It follows that the image of F which is ZD is also irreducible and two dimensional To determine the shape of ZD fix two distinct circles C0 and C not necessarily tangent to D These two circles determine a pencil meaning a line L in the P3 of circles If the equations of C0 and C are f and g respectively then the points on L correspond to the circles whose equations are Sf Tg where S T is a point of P1 The points where L meets ZD are precisely the circles in the pencil that are tangent to D There are two possibilities for the number of points of intersections One is that either f or g say f is the equation for D In this case L is a line through D If C is tangent to D then so is every circle in the pencil and therefore L is contained in ZD The other possibility is that neither f nor g is the equation for D In this case the function f g D is a quotient of quadratics neither of which vanishes identically Therefore it vanishes at two points and has poles at two points These are the points in C0 D and C D respectively counted with multiplicity and with the circular points deducted The rational function determines a morphism D P1 of degree two The fiber over S T P1 is the set of points P for which f P T g P S These are precisely the points at which the circle whose equation is Tf Sg meets D The branch points of this morphism are the circles tangent to D By the Riemann Hurwitz formula there are precisely two branch points and therefore L meets ZD in two points Together these two possibilities for the intersection of L and ZD demonstrate that ZD is a quadric cone All such cones in P3 are the same up to a change of coordinates so this completely determines the shape of ZD To conclude the argument let D1 D2 and D3 be three circles If the intersection ZD1 ZD2 ZD3 is finite then it has degree 23 8 and therefore there are eight solutions to the problem of Apollonius counted with multiplicity To prove that the intersection is generically finite consider the incidence correspondence PS D1 D2 D3 C P3 4 C is tangent to all Di displaystyle Psi D 1 D 2 D 3 C in mathbf P 3 4 colon C text is tangent to all D i nbsp There is a morphism which projects PS onto its final factor of P3 The fiber over C is ZC3 This has dimension 6 so PS has dimension 9 Because P3 3 also has dimension 9 the generic fiber of the projection from PS to the first three factors cannot have positive dimension This proves that generically there are eight solutions counted with multiplicity Since it is possible to exhibit a configuration where the eight solutions are distinct the generic configuration must have all eight solutions distinct Radii editIn the generic problem with eight solution circles The reciprocals of the radii of four of the solution circles sum to the same value as do the reciprocals of the radii of the other four solution circles 40 Special cases editTen combinations of points circles and lines edit Main article Special cases of Apollonius problem Apollonius problem is to construct one or more circles tangent to three given objects in a plane which may be circles points or lines This gives rise to ten types of Apollonius problem one corresponding to each combination of circles lines and points which may be labeled with three letters either C L or P to denote whether the given elements are a circle line or point respectively Table 1 32 As an example the type of Apollonius problem with a given circle line and point is denoted as CLP Some of these special cases are much easier to solve than the general case of three given circles The two simplest cases are the problems of drawing a circle through three given points PPP or tangent to three lines LLL which were solved first by Euclid in his Elements For example the PPP problem can be solved as follows The center of the solution circle is equally distant from all three points and therefore must lie on the perpendicular bisector line of any two Hence the center is the point of intersection of any two perpendicular bisectors Similarly in the LLL case the center must lie on a line bisecting the angle at the three intersection points between the three given lines hence the center lies at the intersection point of two such angle bisectors Since there are two such bisectors at every intersection point of the three given lines there are four solutions to the general LLL problem the incircle and excircles of the triangle formed by the three lines Points and lines may be viewed as special cases of circles a point can be considered as a circle of infinitely small radius and a line may be thought of an infinitely large circle whose center is also at infinity From this perspective the general Apollonius problem is that of constructing circles tangent to three given circles The nine other cases involving points and lines may be viewed as limiting cases of the general problem 32 12 These limiting cases often have fewer solutions than the general problem for example the replacement of a given circle by a given point halves the number of solutions since a point can be construed as an infinitesimal circle that is either internally or externally tangent Table 1 Ten Types of Apollonius Problem Index Code Given Elements Number of solutions in general Example solution in pink given objects in black 1 PPP three points 1 nbsp 2 LPP one line and two points 2 nbsp 3 LLP two lines and a point 2 nbsp 4 CPP one circle and two points 2 nbsp 5 LLL three lines 4 nbsp 6 CLP one circle one line and a point 4 nbsp 7 CCP two circles and a point 4 nbsp 8 CLL one circle and two lines 8 nbsp 9 CCL two circles and a line 8 nbsp 10 CCC three circles the classic problem 8 nbsp Number of solutions edit nbsp Figure 11 An Apollonius problem with no solutions A solution circle pink must cross the dashed given circle black to touch both of the other given circles also black The problem of counting the number of solutions to different types of Apollonius problem belongs to the field of enumerative geometry 12 41 The general number of solutions for each of the ten types of Apollonius problem is given in Table 1 above However special arrangements of the given elements may change the number of solutions For illustration Apollonius problem has no solution if one circle separates the two Figure 11 to touch both the solid given circles the solution circle would have to cross the dashed given circle but that it cannot do if it is to touch the dashed circle tangentially Conversely if three given circles are all tangent at the same point then any circle tangent at the same point is a solution such Apollonius problems have an infinite number of solutions If any of the given circles are identical there is likewise an infinity of solutions If only two given circles are identical there are only two distinct given circles the centers of the solution circles form a hyperbola as used in one solution to Apollonius problem An exhaustive enumeration of the number of solutions for all possible configurations of three given circles points or lines was first undertaken by Muirhead in 1896 42 although earlier work had been done by Stoll 43 and Study 44 However Muirhead s work was incomplete it was extended in 1974 45 and a definitive enumeration with 33 distinct cases was published in 1983 12 Although solutions to Apollonius problem generally occur in pairs related by inversion an odd number of solutions is possible in some cases e g the single solution for PPP or when one or three of the given circles are themselves solutions An example of the latter is given in the section on Descartes theorem However there are no Apollonius problems with seven solutions 34 43 Alternative solutions based on the geometry of circles and spheres have been developed and used in higher dimensions 26 35 Mutually tangent given circles Soddy s circles and Descartes theorem edit If the three given circles are mutually tangent Apollonius problem has five solutions Three solutions are the given circles themselves since each is tangent to itself and to the other two given circles The remaining two solutions shown in red in Figure 12 correspond to the inscribed and circumscribed circles and are called Soddy s circles 46 This special case of Apollonius problem is also known as the four coins problem 47 The three given circles of this Apollonius problem form a Steiner chain tangent to the two Soddy s circles nbsp Figure 12 The two solutions red to Apollonius problem with mutually tangent given circles black labeled by their curvatures Either Soddy circle when taken together with the three given circles produces a set of four circles that are mutually tangent at six points The radii of these four circles are related by an equation known as Descartes theorem In a 1643 letter to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia 48 Rene Descartes showed that k1 k2 k3 ks 2 2 k12 k22 k32 ks2 displaystyle k 1 k 2 k 3 k s 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 k s 2 nbsp where ks 1 rs and rs are the curvature and radius of the solution circle respectively and similarly for the curvatures k1 k2 and k3 and radii r1 r2 and r3 of the three given circles For every set of four mutually tangent circles there is a second set of four mutually tangent circles that are tangent at the same six points 2 49 Descartes theorem was rediscovered independently in 1826 by Jakob Steiner 50 in 1842 by Philip Beecroft 2 49 and again in 1936 by Frederick Soddy 51 Soddy published his findings in the scientific journal Nature as a poem The Kiss Precise of which the first two stanzas are reproduced below The first stanza describes Soddy s circles whereas the second stanza gives Descartes theorem In Soddy s poem two circles are said to kiss if they are tangent whereas the term bend refers to the curvature k of the circle For pairs of lips to kiss maybe Involves no trigonometry Tis not so when four circles kiss Each one the other three To bring this off the four must be As three in one or one in three If one in three beyond a doubt Each gets three kisses from without If three in one then is that one Thrice kissed internally Four circles to the kissing come The smaller are the benter The bend is just the inverse of The distance from the center Though their intrigue left Euclid dumb There s now no need for rule of thumb Since zero bend s a dead straight line And concave bends have minus sign The sum of the squares of all four bends Is half the square of their sum Sundry extensions of Descartes theorem have been derived by Daniel Pedoe 52 Generalizations editApollonius problem can be extended to construct all the circles that intersect three given circles at a precise angle 8 or at three specified crossing angles 81 82 and 83 50 the ordinary Apollonius problem corresponds to a special case in which the crossing angle is zero for all three given circles Another generalization is the dual of the first extension namely to construct circles with three specified tangential distances from the three given circles 26 nbsp Figure 13 A symmetrical Apollonian gasket also called the Leibniz packing after its inventor Gottfried Leibniz Apollonius problem can be extended from the plane to the sphere and other quadratic surfaces For the sphere the problem is to construct all the circles the boundaries of spherical caps that are tangent to three given circles on the sphere 24 53 54 This spherical problem can be rendered into a corresponding planar problem using stereographic projection Once the solutions to the planar problem have been constructed the corresponding solutions to the spherical problem can be determined by inverting the stereographic projection Even more generally one can consider the problem of four tangent curves that result from the intersections of an arbitrary quadratic surface and four planes a problem first considered by Charles Dupin 9 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 55 This gasket is a fractal being self similar and having a dimension d that is not known exactly but is roughly 1 3 56 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 Sierpinski triangle 57 The Apollonian gasket also has deep connections to other fields of mathematics for example it is the limit set of Kleinian groups 58 The configuration of a circle tangent to four circles in the plane has special properties which have been elucidated by Larmor 1891 59 and Lachlan 1893 60 Such a configuration is also the basis for Casey s theorem 17 itself a generalization of Ptolemy s theorem 37 The extension of Apollonius problem to three dimensions namely the problem of finding a fifth sphere that is tangent to four given spheres can be solved by analogous methods 9 For example the given and solution spheres can be resized so that one given sphere is shrunk to point while maintaining tangency 38 Inversion in this point reduces Apollonius problem to finding a plane that is tangent to three given spheres There are in general eight such planes which become the solutions to the original problem by reversing the inversion and the resizing This problem was first considered by Pierre de Fermat 61 and many alternative solution methods have been developed over the centuries 62 Apollonius problem can even be extended to d dimensions to construct the hyperspheres tangent to a given set of d 1 hyperspheres 41 Following the publication of Frederick Soddy s re derivation of the Descartes theorem in 1936 several people solved independently the mutually tangent case corresponding to Soddy s circles in d dimensions 63 Applications editThe principal application of Apollonius problem as formulated by Isaac Newton is hyperbolic trilateration which seeks to determine a position from the differences in distances to at least three points 8 For example a ship may seek to determine its position from the differences in arrival times of signals from three synchronized transmitters Solutions to Apollonius problem were used in World War I to determine the location of an artillery piece from the time a gunshot was heard at three different positions 9 and hyperbolic trilateration is the principle used by the Decca Navigator System and LORAN 7 Similarly the location of an aircraft may be determined from the difference in arrival times of its transponder signal at four receiving stations This multilateration problem is equivalent to the three dimensional generalization of Apollonius problem and applies to global navigation satellite systems see GPS Geometric interpretation 31 It is also used to determine the position of calling animals such as birds and whales although Apollonius problem does not pertain if the speed of sound varies with direction i e the transmission medium not isotropic 64 Apollonius problem has other applications In Book 1 Proposition 21 in his Principia Isaac Newton used his solution of Apollonius problem to construct an orbit in celestial mechanics from the center of attraction and observations of tangent lines to the orbit corresponding to instantaneous velocity 9 The special case of the problem of Apollonius when all three circles are tangent is used in the Hardy Littlewood circle method of analytic number theory to construct Hans Rademacher s contour for complex integration given by the boundaries of an infinite set of Ford circles each of which touches several others 65 Finally Apollonius problem has been applied to some types of packing problems which arise in disparate fields such as the error correcting codes used on DVDs and the design of pharmaceuticals that bind in a particular enzyme of a pathogenic bacterium 66 See also editApollonius point Apollonius theorem Isodynamic point of a triangleReferences edit a b c d e Dorrie H 1965 The Tangency Problem of Apollonius 100 Great Problems of Elementary Mathematics Their History and Solutions New York Dover pp 154 160 32 a b c d e Coxeter HSM 1 January 1968 The Problem of Apollonius The American Mathematical Monthly 75 1 5 15 doi 10 2307 2315097 ISSN 0002 9890 JSTOR 2315097 a b Coolidge JL 1916 A Treatise on the Circle and the Sphere Oxford Clarendon Press pp 167 172 a b c Coxeter HSM Greitzer SL 1967 Geometry Revisited Washington MAA ISBN 978 0 88385 619 2 Coxeter HSM 1969 Introduction to Geometry 2nd ed New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 50458 0 Needham T 2007 Visual Complex Analysis New York Oxford University Press pp 140 141 ISBN 978 0 19 853446 4 a b Hofmann Wellenhof B Legat K Wieser M Lichtenegger H 2003 Navigation Principles of Positioning and Guidance Springer ISBN 978 3 211 00828 7 a b Schmidt RO 1972 A new approach 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Whiteside ed The Mathematical Papers of Isaac Newton Volume VI 1684 1691 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 164 ISBN 0 521 08719 8 a b Newton I 1687 Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica Book I Section IV Lemma 16 Newton I 1974 DT Whiteside ed The Mathematical Papers of Isaac Newton Volume VI 1684 1691 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 162 165 238 241 ISBN 0 521 08719 8 a b Casey J 1886 1881 A sequel to the first six books of the Elements of Euclid Hodges Figgis amp co p 122 ISBN 978 1 4181 6609 0 Courant R Robbins H 1943 What is Mathematics An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods London Oxford University Press pp 125 127 161 162 ISBN 0 19 510519 2 Bold B 1982 Famous problems of geometry and how to solve them Dover Publications pp 29 30 ISBN 0 486 24297 8 a b Viete F 1600 Apollonius Gallus Seu Exsuscitata Apolloni Pergaei Peri Epafwn Geometria In Frans van Schooten ed Francisci Vietae Opera mathematica in Latin ex officina B et A Elzeviriorum Lugduni Batavorum published 1646 pp 325 346 in Latin Boyer CB Merzbach UC 1991 Apollonius of Perga A History of Mathematics 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 322 ISBN 0 471 54397 7 Simson R 1734 Mathematical Collection volume VII p 117 Zeuthen HG 1886 Die Lehre von den Kegelschnitten im Altertum in German Copenhagen Unknown pp 381 383 Heath Thomas Little A History of Greek Mathematics Volume II From Aristarchus to Diophantus Oxford Clarendon Press pp 181 185 416 417 Poncelet J V January 1811 Solutions de plusieurs problemes de geometrie et de mecanique Correspondance sur l Ecole Imperiale Polytechnique in French 2 3 271 273 a b Gergonne J 1813 1814 Recherche du cercle qui en touche trois autres sur une sphere Ann Math Pures Appl in French 4 Petersen J 1879 Methods and Theories for the Solution of Problems of Geometrical Constructions Applied to 410 Problems London Sampson Low Marston Searle amp Rivington pp 94 95 Example 403 a b c d e Zlobec BJ Kosta NM 2001 Configurations of Cycles and the Apollonius Problem Rocky Mountain Journal of Mathematics 31 2 725 744 doi 10 1216 rmjm 1020171586 Euler L 1790 Solutio facilis problematis quo quaeritur circulus qui datos tres circulos tangat PDF Nova Acta Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae in Latin 6 95 101 Reprinted in Euler s Opera Omnia series 1 volume 26 pp 270 275 a b Gauss CF 1873 Werke 4 Band in German reprinted in 1973 by Georg Olms Verlag Hildesheim ed Gottingen Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften pp 399 400 ISBN 3 487 04636 9 Carnot L 1801 De la correlation dans les figures de geometrie in French Paris Unknown publisher pp No 158 159 Carnot L 1803 Geometrie de position in French Paris Unknown publisher pp 390 334 Cauchy AL July 1806 Du cercle tangent a trois cercles donnes Correspondance sur l Ecole Polytechnique in French 1 6 193 195 a b Hoshen J 1996 The GPS Equations and the Problem of Apollonius IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems 32 3 1116 1124 Bibcode 1996ITAES 32 1116H doi 10 1109 7 532270 S2CID 30190437 a b c Altshiller Court N 1952 College Geometry An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle 2nd edition revised and enlarged ed New York Barnes and Noble pp 222 227 ISBN 978 0 486 45805 2 Hartshorne Robin 2000 Geometry Euclid and Beyond New York Springer Verlag pp 346 355 496 499 ISBN 978 0 387 98650 0 Rouche Eugene Ch de Comberousse 1883 Traite de geometrie in French 5th edition revised and augmented ed Paris Gauthier Villars pp 252 256 OCLC 252013267 Coaklay GW 1860 Analytical Solutions of the Ten Problems in the Tangencies of Circles and also of the Fifteen Problems in the Tangencies of Spheres The Mathematical Monthly 2 116 126 a b Pedoe D 1970 The missing seventh circle Elemente der Mathematik 25 14 15 a b Knight RD 2005 The Apollonius contact problem and Lie contact geometry Journal of Geometry 83 1 2 137 152 doi 10 1007 s00022 005 0009 x S2CID 122228528 Salmon G 1879 A Treatise on Conic Sections Containing an Account of Some of the Most Important Modern Algebraic and Geometric Methods London Longmans Green and Co pp 110 115 291 292 ISBN 0 8284 0098 9 a b c Johnson RA 1960 Advanced Euclidean Geometry An Elementary treatise on the geometry of the Triangle and the Circle reprint of 1929 edition by Houghton Mifflin ed New York Dover Publications pp 117 121 Apollonius problem 121 128 Casey s and Hart s theorems ISBN 978 0 486 46237 0 a b c Ogilvy C S 1990 Excursions in Geometry Dover pp 48 51 Apollonius problem 60 extension to tangent spheres ISBN 0 486 26530 7 Eisenbud David and Harris Joe 3264 and All That A Second Course in Algebraic Geometry Cambridge University Press 2016 ISBN 978 1107602724 pp 66 68 Milorad R Stevanovic Predrag B Petrovic and Marina M Stevanovic Radii of circles in Apollonius problem Forum Geometricorum 17 2017 359 372 Theorem 1 http forumgeom fau edu FG2017volume17 FG201735 pdf a b Dreschler K Sterz U 1999 Apollonius contact problem in n space in view of enumerative geometry Acta Mathematica Universitatis Comenianae 68 1 37 47 Muirhead RF 1896 On the Number and nature of the Solutions of the Apollonian Contact Problem Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society 14 135 147 attached figures 44 114 doi 10 1017 S0013091500031898 a b Stoll V 1876 Zum Problem des Apollonius Mathematische Annalen in German 6 4 613 632 doi 10 1007 BF01443201 S2CID 120097802 Study E 1897 Das Apollonische Problem Mathematische Annalen in German 49 3 4 497 542 doi 10 1007 BF01444366 S2CID 120984176 Fitz Gerald JM 1974 A Note on a Problem of Apollonius Journal of Geometry 5 15 26 doi 10 1007 BF01954533 S2CID 59444157 Eppstein D 1 January 2001 Tangent Spheres and Triangle Centers The American Mathematical Monthly 108 1 63 66 arXiv math 9909152 doi 10 2307 2695679 ISSN 0002 9890 JSTOR 2695679 S2CID 14002377 Oldknow A 1 April 1996 The Euler Gergonne Soddy Triangle of a Triangle The American Mathematical Monthly 103 4 319 329 doi 10 2307 2975188 ISSN 0002 9890 JSTOR 2975188 Weisstein EW Four Coins Problem MathWorld Retrieved 2008 10 06 Descartes R Œuvres de Descartes Correspondance IV C Adam and P Tannery Eds Paris Leopold Cert 1901 in French a b Beecroft H 1842 Properties of Circles in Mutual Contact The Lady s and Gentleman s Diary 139 91 96 Beecroft H 1846 Unknown title The Lady s and Gentleman s Diary 51 MathWords online article Archived 2008 01 18 at the Wayback Machine a b Steiner J 1826 Einige geometrische Betrachtungen Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1 161 184 252 288 doi 10 1515 crll 1826 1 161 S2CID 122065577 Soddy F 20 June 1936 The Kiss Precise Nature 137 3477 1021 Bibcode 1936Natur 137 1021S doi 10 1038 1371021a0 Pedoe D 1 June 1967 On a theorem in geometry Amer Math Monthly 74 6 627 640 doi 10 2307 2314247 ISSN 0002 9890 JSTOR 2314247 Carnot L 1803 Geometrie de position Paris Unknown publisher pp 415 356 Vannson 1855 Contact des cercles sur la sphere par la geometrie Nouvelles Annales de Mathematiques in French XIV 55 71 Kasner E Supnick F December 1943 The Apollonian Packing of Circles Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 29 11 378 384 Bibcode 1943PNAS 29 378K doi 10 1073 pnas 29 11 378 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 1078636 PMID 16588629 Boyd David W 1973 Improved Bounds for the Disk Packing Constants Aequationes Mathematicae 9 99 106 doi 10 1007 BF01838194 S2CID 121089590 Boyd David W 1973 The Residual Set Dimension of the Apollonian Packing Mathematika 20 2 170 174 doi 10 1112 S0025579300004745 McMullen Curtis T 1998 Hausdorff dimension and conformal dynamics III Computation of dimension PDF American Journal of Mathematics 120 4 691 721 doi 10 1353 ajm 1998 0031 S2CID 15928775 Mandelbrot B 1983 The Fractal Geometry of Nature New York W H Freeman p 170 ISBN 978 0 7167 1186 5 Aste T Weaire D 2008 The Pursuit of Perfect Packing 2nd ed New York Taylor and Francis pp 131 138 ISBN 978 1 4200 6817 7 Mumford D Series C Wright D 2002 Indra s Pearls The Vision of Felix Klein Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 196 223 ISBN 0 521 35253 3 Larmor A 1891 Contacts of Systems of Circles Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 23 136 157 doi 10 1112 plms s1 23 1 135 Lachlan R 1893 An elementary treatise on modern pure geometry London Macmillan pp 383 396 pp 244 251 ISBN 1 4297 0050 5 de Fermat P Varia opera mathematica p 74 Tolos 1679 Euler L 1810 Solutio facilis problematis quo quaeritur sphaera quae datas quatuor sphaeras utcunque dispositas contingat PDF Memoires de l Academie des Sciences de St Petersbourg in Latin 2 17 28 Reprinted in Euler s Opera Omnia series 1 volume 26 pp 334 343 Carnot L 1803 Geometrie de position in French Paris Imprimerie de Crapelet chez J B M Duprat pp 357 416 Hachette JNP September 1808 Sur le contact des spheres sur la sphere tangente a quatre spheres donnees sur le cercle tangent a trois cercles donnes Correspondance sur l Ecole Polytechnique in French 1 2 27 28 Francais J January 1810 De la sphere tangente a quatre spheres donnees Correspondance sur l Ecole Imperiale Polytechnique in French 2 2 63 66 Francais J January 1813 Solution analytique du probleme de la sphere tangente a quatre spheres donnees Correspondance sur l Ecole Imperiale Polytechnique in French 2 5 409 410 Dupin C January 1813 Memoire sur les spheres Correspondance sur l Ecole Imperiale Polytechnique in French 2 5 423 Reye T 1879 Synthetische Geometrie der Kugeln PDF in German Leipzig B G Teubner Serret JA 1848 De la sphere tangente a quatre spheres donnees Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1848 37 51 57 doi 10 1515 crelle 1848 18483704 S2CID 201061558 Coaklay GW 1859 1860 Analytical Solutions of the Ten Problems in the Tangencies of Circles and also of the Fifteen Problems in the Tangencies of Spheres The Mathematical Monthly 2 116 126 Alvord B 1 January 1882 The intersection of circles and intersection of spheres American Journal of Mathematics 5 1 25 44 with four pages of Figures doi 10 2307 2369532 ISSN 0002 9327 JSTOR 2369532 Gossett T 1937 The Kiss Precise Nature 139 3506 62 Bibcode 1937Natur 139Q 62 doi 10 1038 139062a0 Spiesberger JL 2004 Geometry of locating sounds from differences in travel time Isodiachrons Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 116 5 3168 3177 Bibcode 2004ASAJ 116 3168S doi 10 1121 1 1804625 PMID 15603162 S2CID 626749 Apostol TM 1990 Modular functions and Dirichlet series in number theory 2nd ed New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 97127 8 Lewis RH Bridgett S 2003 Conic Tangency Equations and Apollonius Problems in Biochemistry and Pharmacology Mathematics and Computers in Simulation 61 2 101 114 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 106 6518 doi 10 1016 S0378 4754 02 00122 2 Further reading edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Properties of circles in mutual contact nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article Poncelet s solution to the problem of Apollonius Boyd DW 1973 The osculatory packing of a three dimensional sphere Canadian Journal of Mathematics 25 2 303 322 doi 10 4153 CJM 1973 030 5 S2CID 120042053 Callandreau Edouard 1949 Celebres problemes mathematiques in French Paris Albin Michel pp 219 226 OCLC 61042170 Camerer JG 1795 Apollonii de Tactionibus quae supersunt ac maxime lemmata Pappi in hos libros Graece nunc primum edita e codicibus manuscriptis cum Vietae librorum Apollonii restitutione adjectis observationibus computationibus ac problematis Apolloniani historia in Latin Gothae Ettinger Gisch D Ribando JM 2004 Apollonius Problem A Study of Solutions and Their Connections PDF American Journal of Undergraduate Research 3 15 25 doi 10 33697 ajur 2004 010 Pappus of Alexandria 1933 Pappus d Alexandrie La collection mathematique in French Paris OCLC 67245614 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Trans introd and notes by Paul Ver Eecke Simon M 1906 Uber die Entwicklung der Elementargeometrie im XIX Jahrhundert in German Berlin Teubner pp 97 105 Wells D 1991 The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry New York Penguin Books pp 3 5 ISBN 0 14 011813 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Problem of Apollonius Ask Dr Math solution Mathforum Retrieved 2008 05 05 Weisstein Eric W Apollonius problem MathWorld Apollonius Problem Cut The Knot Retrieved 2008 05 05 Kunkel Paul Tangent Circles Whistler Alley Retrieved 2008 05 05 Austin David March 2006 When kissing involves trigonometry Feature Column at the American Mathematical Society website Retrieved 2008 05 05 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Problem of Apollonius amp oldid 1210187813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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