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Descartes' theorem

In geometry, Descartes' theorem states that for every four kissing, or mutually tangent, circles, the radii of the circles satisfy a certain quadratic equation. By solving this equation, one can construct a fourth circle tangent to three given, mutually tangent circles. The theorem is named after René Descartes, who stated it in 1643.

Kissing circles. Given three mutually tangent circles (black), what radius can a fourth tangent circle have? There are in general two possible answers (red).

Frederick Soddy's 1936 poem The Kiss Precise summarizes the theorem in terms of the bends (signed inverse radii) of the four circles:

The sum of the squares of all four bends
Is half the square of their sum[1]

Special cases of the theorem apply when one or two of the circles is replaced by a straight line (with zero bend) or when the bends are integers or square numbers. A version of the theorem using complex numbers allows the centers of the circles, and not just their radii, to be calculated. With an appropriate definition of curvature, the theorem also applies in spherical geometry and hyperbolic geometry. In higher dimensions, an analogous quadratic equation applies to systems of pairwise tangent spheres or hyperspheres.

History edit

Geometrical problems involving tangent circles have been pondered for millennia. In ancient Greece of the third century BC, Apollonius of Perga devoted an entire book to the topic, Ἐπαφαί [Tangencies]. It has been lost, and is known largely through a description of its contents by Pappus of Alexandria and through fragmentary references to it in medieval Islamic mathematics.[2] However, Greek geometry was largely focused on straightedge and compass construction. For instance, the problem of Apollonius, closely related to Descartes' theorem, asks for the construction of a circle tangent to three given circles which need not themselves be tangent.[3] Instead, Descartes' theorem is formulated using algebraic relations between numbers describing geometric forms. This is characteristic of analytic geometry, a field pioneered by René Descartes and Pierre de Fermat in the first half of the 17th century.[4]

Descartes discussed the tangent circle problem briefly in 1643, in two letters to Princess Elisabeth of the Palatinate.[5] Descartes initially posed to the princess the problem of Apollonius. After Elisabeth's partial results revealed that solving the full problem analytically would be too tedious, he simplified the problem to the case in which the three given circles are mutually tangent, and in solving this simplified problem he came up with the equation describing the relation between the radii, or curvatures, of four pairwise tangent circles. This result became known as Descartes' theorem.[6][7] Descartes did not provide the reasoning through which he found this relation.[8]

Japanese mathematics frequently concerned problems involving circles and their tangencies,[9] and Japanese mathematician Yamaji Nushizumi stated a form of Descartes’ circle theorem in 1751. Like Descartes, he expressed it as a polynomial equation on the radii rather than their curvatures.[10][11] The special case of this theorem for one straight line and three circles was recorded on a Japanese sangaku tablet from 1824.[12]

Descartes' theorem was rediscovered in 1826 by Jakob Steiner,[13] in 1842 by Philip Beecroft,[14] and in 1936 by Frederick Soddy. Soddy chose to format his version of the theorem as a poem, The Kiss Precise, and published it in Nature. The kissing circles in this problem are sometimes known as Soddy circles. Soddy also extended the theorem to spheres,[1] and in another poem described the chain of six spheres each tangent to its neighbors and to three given mutually tangent spheres, a configuration now called Soddy's hexlet.[15][16] Thorold Gosset and several others extended the theorem and the poem to arbitrary dimensions; Gosset's version was published the following year.[17][18] The generalization is sometimes called the Soddy–Gosset theorem,[19] although both the hexlet and the three-dimensional version were known earlier, in sangaku and in the 1886 work of Robert Lachlan.[12][20][21]

Multiple proofs of the theorem have been published. Steiner's proof uses Pappus chains and Viviani's theorem. Proofs by Philip Beecroft and by H. S. M. Coxeter involve four more circles, passing through triples of tangencies of the original three circles; Coxeter also provided a proof using inversive geometry. Additional proofs involve arguments based on symmetry, calculations in exterior algebra, or algebraic manipulation of Heron's formula (for which see § Soddy circles of a triangle).[22][23] The result also follows from the observation that the Cayley–Menger determinant of the four coplanar circle centers is zero.[24]

Statement edit

 
Here, as all three circles are tangent to each other at the same point, Descartes' theorem does not apply.

Descartes' theorem is most easily stated in terms of the circles' curvatures.[25] The signed curvature (or bend) of a circle is defined as  , where   is its radius. The larger a circle, the smaller is the magnitude of its curvature, and vice versa. The sign in   (represented by the   symbol) is positive for a circle that is externally tangent to the other circles. For an internally tangent circle that circumscribes the other circles, the sign is negative. If a straight line is considered a degenerate circle with zero curvature (and thus infinite radius), Descartes' theorem also applies to a line and three circles that are all three mutually tangent (see Generalized circle).[1]

For four circles that are tangent to each other at six distinct points, with curvatures   for  , Descartes' theorem says:

 

 

 

 

 

 

If one of the four curvatures is considered to be a variable, and the rest to be constants, this is a quadratic equation. To find the radius of a fourth circle tangent to three given kissing circles, the quadratic equation can be solved as[13][26]

 

 

 

 

 

 

The   symbol indicates that in general this equation has two solutions, and any triple of tangent circles has two tangent circles (or degenerate straight lines). Problem-specific criteria may favor one of these two solutions over the other in any given problem.[22]

The theorem does not apply to systems of circles with more than two circles tangent to each other at the same point. It requires that the points of tangency be distinct.[8] When more than two circles are tangent at a single point, there can be infinitely many such circles, with arbitrary curvatures; see pencil of circles.[27]

Locating the circle centers edit

To determine a circle completely, not only its radius (or curvature), but also its center must be known. The relevant equation is expressed most clearly if the Cartesian coordinates   are interpreted as a complex number  . The equation then looks similar to Descartes' theorem and is therefore called the complex Descartes theorem. Given four circles with curvatures   and centers   for  , the following equality holds in addition to equation (1):

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once   has been found using equation (2), one may proceed to calculate   by solving equation (3) as a quadratic equation, leading to a form similar to equation (2):

 

Again, in general there are two solutions for   corresponding to the two solutions for  . The plus/minus sign in the above formula for   does not necessarily correspond to the plus/minus sign in the formula for  .[19][28][29]

Special cases edit

 
Three congruent mutually tangent circles of curvatures k = 1/√3 are all tangent to two circles of respective curvatures k = √3 ± 2.

Three congruent circles edit

When three of the four circles are congruent, their centers form an equilateral triangle, as do their points of tangency. The two possibilities for a fourth circle tangent to all three are concentric, and equation (2) reduces to[30]

 

One or more straight lines edit

 
Descartes' theorem still applies when one of the circles is replaced by a straight line of zero curvature.

If one of the three circles is replaced by a straight line tangent to the remaining circles, then its curvature is zero and drops out of equation (1). For instance, if  , then equation (1) can be factorized as[31]

 

and equation (2) simplifies to[32]

 

Taking the square root of both sides leads to another alternative formulation of this case (with  ),

 

which has been described as "a sort of demented version of the Pythagorean theorem".[25]

If two circles are replaced by lines, the tangency between the two replaced circles becomes a parallelism between their two replacement lines. In this case, with  , equation (2) is reduced to the trivial

 

This corresponds to the observation that, for all four curves to remain mutually tangent, the other two circles must be congruent.[19][26]

Integer curvatures edit

 
An Apollonian gasket with integer curvatures, generated by four mutually tangent circles with curvatures −10 (the outer circle), 18, 23, and 27

When four tangent circles described by equation (2) all have integer curvatures, the alternative fourth circle described by the second solution to the equation must also have an integer curvature. This is because both solutions differ from an integer by the square root of an integer, and so either solution can only be an integer if this square root, and hence the other solution, is also an integer. Every four integers that satisfy the equation in Descartes' theorem form the curvatures of four tangent circles.[33] Integer quadruples of this type are also closely related to Heronian triangles, triangles with integer sides and area.[34]

Starting with any four mutually tangent circles, and repeatedly replacing one of the four with its alternative solution (Vieta jumping), in all possible ways, leads to a system of infinitely many tangent circles called an Apollonian gasket. When the initial four circles have integer curvatures, so does each replacement, and therefore all of the circles in the gasket have integer curvatures. Any four tangent circles with integer curvatures belong to exactly one such gasket, uniquely described by its root quadruple of the largest four largest circles and four smallest curvatures. This quadruple can be found, starting from any other quadruple from the same gasket, by repeatedly replacing the smallest circle by a larger one that solves the same Descartes equation, until no such reduction is possible.[33]

A root quadruple is said to be primitive if it has no nontrivial common divisor. Every primitive root quadruple can be found from a factorization of a sum of two squares,  , as the quadruple  . To be primitive, it must satisfy the additional conditions  , and  . Factorizations of sums of two squares can be obtained using the sum of two squares theorem. Any other integer Apollonian gasket can be formed by multiplying a primitive root quadruple by an arbitrary integer, and any quadruple in one of these gaskets (that is, any integer solution to the Descartes equation) can be formed by reversing the replacement process used to find the root quadruple. For instance, the gasket with root quadruple  , shown in the figure, is generated in this way from the factorized sum of two squares  .[33]

Ford circles edit

 
Ford circles in the unit interval

The special cases of one straight line and integer curvatures combine in the Ford circles. These are an infinite family of circles tangent to the  -axis of the Cartesian coordinate system at its rational points. Each fraction   (in lowest terms) has a circle tangent to the line at the point   with curvature  . Three of these curvatures, together with the zero curvature of the axis, meet the conditions of Descartes' theorem whenever the denominators of two of the corresponding fractions sum to the denominator of the third. The two Ford circles for fractions   and   (both in lowest terms) are tangent when  . When they are tangent, they form a quadruple of tangent circles with the  -axis and with the circle for their mediant  .[35]

The Ford circles belong to a special Apollonian gasket with root quadruple  , bounded between two parallel lines, which may be taken as the  -axis and the line  . This is the only Apollonian gasket containing a straight line, and not bounded within a negative-curvature circle. The Ford circles are the circles in this gasket that are tangent to the  -axis.[33]

Geometric progression edit

 
Coxeter's loxodromic sequence of tangent circles. Each circle is labeled by an integer i, its position in the sequence; it has radius ρi and curvature ρ−i.

When the four radii of the circles in Descartes' theorem are assumed to be in a geometric progression with ratio  , the curvatures are also in the same progression (in reverse). Plugging this ratio into the theorem gives the equation

 

which has only one real solution greater than one, the ratio

 

where   is the golden ratio. If the same progression is continued in both directions, each consecutive four numbers describe circles obeying Descartes' theorem. The resulting double-ended geometric progression of circles can be arranged into a single spiral pattern of tangent circles, called Coxeter's loxodromic sequence of tangent circles. It was first described, together with analogous constructions in higher dimensions, by H. S. M. Coxeter in 1968.[36][37]

Soddy circles of a triangle edit

Any triangle in the plane has three externally tangent circles centered at its vertices. Letting   be the three points,   be the lengths of the opposite sides, and   be the semiperimeter, these three circles have radii  . By Descartes' theorem, two more circles, sometimes called Soddy circles, are tangent to these three circles. They are separated by the incircle, one interior to it and one exterior.[38][39][40] Descartes' theorem can be used to show that the inner Soddy circle's curvature is  , where   is the triangle's area,   is its circumradius, and   is its inradius. The outer Soddy circle has curvature  .[41] The inner curvature is always positive, but the outer curvature can be positive, negative, or zero. Triangles whose outer circle degenerates to a straight line with curvature zero have been called "Soddyian triangles".[41]

 
Four triangles with vertices at the centers of Soddy circles

One of the many proofs of Descartes' theorem is based on this connection to triangle geometry and on Heron's formula for the area of a triangle as a function of its side lengths. If three circles are externally tangent, with radii   then their centers   form the vertices of a triangle with side lengths     and   and semiperimeter   By Heron's formula, this triangle   has area

 

Now consider the inner Soddy circle with radius   centered at point   inside the triangle. Triangle   can be broken into three smaller triangles     and   whose areas can be obtained by substituting   for one of the other radii in the area formula above. The area of the first triangle equals the sum of these three areas:

 

Careful algebraic manipulation shows that this formula is equivalent to equation (1), Descartes' theorem.[22]

 
Here the outer Soddy center lies outside the triangle

This analysis covers all cases in which four circles are externally tangent; one is always the inner Soddy circle of the other three. The cases in which one of the circles is internally tangent to the other three and forms their outer Soddy circle are similar. Again the four centers   form four triangles, but (letting   be the center of the outer Soddy circle) the triangle sides incident to   have lengths that are differences of radii,     and   rather than sums.   may lie inside or outside the triangle formed by the other three centers; when it is inside, this triangle's area equals the sum of the other three triangle areas, as above. When it is outside, the quadrilateral formed by the four centers can be subdivided by a diagonal into two triangles, in two different ways, giving an equality between the sum of two triangle areas and the sum of the other two triangle areas. In every case, the area equation reduces to Descartes' theorem. This method does not apply directly to the cases in which one of the circles degenerates to a line, but those can be handled as a limiting case of circles.[22]

Generalizations edit

Arbitrary four-circle configurations edit

Descartes' theorem can be expressed as a matrix equation and then generalized to other configurations of four oriented circles by changing the matrix. Let   be a column vector of the four circle curvatures and let   be a symmetric matrix whose coefficients   represent the relative orientation between the ith and jth oriented circles at their intersection point:

 

Then equation (1) can be rewritten as the matrix equation[19][42]

 

As a generalization of Descartes' theorem, a modified symmetric matrix   can represent any desired configuration of four circles by replacing each coefficient with the inclination   between two circles, defined as

 

where   are the respective radii of the circles, and   is the Euclidean distance between their centers.[43][44][45] When the circles intersect,  , the cosine of the intersection angle between the circles. The inclination, sometimes called inversive distance, is   when the circles are tangent and oriented the same way at their point of tangency,   when the two circles are tangent and oriented oppositely at the point of tangency,   for orthogonal circles, outside the interval   for non-intersecting circles, and   in the limit as one circle degenerates to a point.[42][37]

The equation   is satisfied for any arbitrary configuration of four circles in the plane, provided   is the appropriate matrix of pairwise inclinations.[42]

Spherical and hyperbolic geometry edit

 
A special case of Descartes' theorem on the sphere has three circles of radius 60° (k = 1/√3, in blue) for which both circles touching all three (in green) have the same radius (30°, k = √3).

Descartes' theorem generalizes to mutually tangent great or small circles in spherical geometry if the curvature of the  th circle is defined as   the cotangent of the oriented intrinsic radius   Then:[44][19]

 

Solving for one of the curvatures in terms of the other three,

 

As a matrix equation,

 

The quantity   is the "stereographic diameter" of a small circle. This is the Euclidean length of the diameter in the stereographically projected plane when some point on the circle is projected to the origin. For a great circle, such a stereographic projection is a straight line through the origin, so  .[46]

 
Four generalized circles through the origin of the Poincaré disk model of the hyperbolic plane: Circle (blue), horocycle (red), hypercycle (purple), and geodesic (green). The boundary of ideal points is represented with a dashed stroke, and the shaded region is outside the plane.

Likewise, the theorem generalizes to mutually tangent circles in hyperbolic geometry if the curvature of the  th cycle is defined as   the hyperbolic cotangent of the oriented intrinsic radius   Then:[19][44]

 

Solving for one of the curvatures in terms of the other three,

 

As a matrix equation,

 

This formula also holds for mutually tangent configurations in hyperbolic geometry including hypercycles and horocycles, if   is taken to be the reciprocal of the stereographic diameter of the cycle. This is the diameter under stereographic projection (the Poincaré disk model) when one endpoint of the diameter is projected to the origin.[47] Hypercycles do not have a well-defined center or intrinsic radius and horocycles have an ideal point for a center and infinite intrinsic radius, but   for a hyperbolic circle,   for a horocycle,   for a hypercycle, and   for a geodesic.[48]

Higher dimensions edit

 
Soddy's hexlet. Any pair of adjacent green spheres together with the two red spheres and the outer gray sphere satisfy the three-dimensional case of Descartes' theorem.

In  -dimensional Euclidean space, the maximum number of mutually tangent hyperspheres is  . For example, in 3-dimensional space, five spheres can be mutually tangent. The curvatures of the hyperspheres satisfy

 

with the case   corresponding to a flat hyperplane, generalizing the 2-dimensional version of the theorem.[19][44] Although there is no 3-dimensional analogue of the complex numbers, the relationship between the positions of the centers can be re-expressed as a matrix equation, which also generalizes to   dimensions.[19]

In three dimensions, suppose that three mutually tangent spheres are fixed, and a fourth sphere   is given, tangent to the three fixed spheres. The three-dimensional version of Descartes' theorem can be applied to find a sphere   tangent to   and the fixed spheres, then applied again to find a new sphere   tangent to   and the fixed spheres, and so on. The result is a cyclic sequence of six spheres each tangent to its neighbors in the sequence and to the three fixed spheres, a configuration called Soddy's hexlet, after Soddy's discovery and publication of it in the form of another poem in 1936.[15][16]

Higher-dimensional configurations of mutually tangent hyperspheres in spherical or hyperbolic geometry, with curvatures defined as above, satisfy

 

where   in spherical geometry and   in hyperbolic geometry.[44][19]

See also edit

References edit

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    Kocik, Jerzy (2019), Proof of Descartes circle formula and its generalization clarified, arXiv:1910.09174

  43. ^ Coolidge, Julian Lowell (1916), "X. The Oriented Circle", A Treatise on the Circle and the Sphere, Clarendon, pp. 351–407, also see p. 109, p. 408
  44. ^ a b c d e Mauldon, J. G. (1962), "Sets of equally inclined spheres", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 14: 509–516, doi:10.4153/CJM-1962-042-6
  45. ^ Rigby, J. F. (1981), "The geometry of cycles, and generalized Laguerre inversion", in Davis, Chandler; Grünbaum, Branko; Sherk, F.A. (eds.), The Geometric Vein: The Coxeter Festschrift, Springer, pp. 355–378, doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-5648-9_26, ISBN 978-1-4612-5650-2
  46. ^ A definition of stereographic distance can be found in Li, Hongbo; Hestenes, David; Rockwood, Alyn (2001), (PDF), Geometric Computing with Clifford Algebras, Springer, pp. 61–75, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.412.4949, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-04621-0_3, ISBN 978-3-642-07442-4, archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-06-04, retrieved 2023-06-04
  47. ^ This concept of distance was called the "pseudo-chordal distance" for the complex unit disk as a model for the hyperbolic plane by Carathéodory, Constantin (1954) [1950], "§§1.3.86–88 Chordal and Pseudo-chordal Distance", Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable, vol. I, translated by Steinhardt, Fritz, Chelsea, pp. 81–86, MR 0060009
  48. ^ Eriksson, Nicholas; Lagarias, Jeffrey C. (2007), "Apollonian Circle Packings: Number Theory II. Spherical and Hyperbolic Packings", The Ramanujan Journal, 14 (3): 437–469, arXiv:math/0403296, doi:10.1007/s11139-007-9052-6, S2CID 14024662

descartes, theorem, other, uses, disambiguation, geometry, states, that, every, four, kissing, mutually, tangent, circles, radii, circles, satisfy, certain, quadratic, equation, solving, this, equation, construct, fourth, circle, tangent, three, given, mutuall. For other uses see Descartes theorem disambiguation In geometry Descartes theorem states that for every four kissing or mutually tangent circles the radii of the circles satisfy a certain quadratic equation By solving this equation one can construct a fourth circle tangent to three given mutually tangent circles The theorem is named after Rene Descartes who stated it in 1643 Kissing circles Given three mutually tangent circles black what radius can a fourth tangent circle have There are in general two possible answers red Frederick Soddy s 1936 poem The Kiss Precise summarizes the theorem in terms of the bends signed inverse radii of the four circles The sum of the squares of all four bends Is half the square of their sum 1 Special cases of the theorem apply when one or two of the circles is replaced by a straight line with zero bend or when the bends are integers or square numbers A version of the theorem using complex numbers allows the centers of the circles and not just their radii to be calculated With an appropriate definition of curvature the theorem also applies in spherical geometry and hyperbolic geometry In higher dimensions an analogous quadratic equation applies to systems of pairwise tangent spheres or hyperspheres Contents 1 History 2 Statement 3 Locating the circle centers 4 Special cases 4 1 Three congruent circles 4 2 One or more straight lines 4 3 Integer curvatures 4 4 Ford circles 4 5 Geometric progression 5 Soddy circles of a triangle 6 Generalizations 6 1 Arbitrary four circle configurations 6 2 Spherical and hyperbolic geometry 6 3 Higher dimensions 7 See also 8 ReferencesHistory editGeometrical problems involving tangent circles have been pondered for millennia In ancient Greece of the third century BC Apollonius of Perga devoted an entire book to the topic Ἐpafai Tangencies It has been lost and is known largely through a description of its contents by Pappus of Alexandria and through fragmentary references to it in medieval Islamic mathematics 2 However Greek geometry was largely focused on straightedge and compass construction For instance the problem of Apollonius closely related to Descartes theorem asks for the construction of a circle tangent to three given circles which need not themselves be tangent 3 Instead Descartes theorem is formulated using algebraic relations between numbers describing geometric forms This is characteristic of analytic geometry a field pioneered by Rene Descartes and Pierre de Fermat in the first half of the 17th century 4 Descartes discussed the tangent circle problem briefly in 1643 in two letters to Princess Elisabeth of the Palatinate 5 Descartes initially posed to the princess the problem of Apollonius After Elisabeth s partial results revealed that solving the full problem analytically would be too tedious he simplified the problem to the case in which the three given circles are mutually tangent and in solving this simplified problem he came up with the equation describing the relation between the radii or curvatures of four pairwise tangent circles This result became known as Descartes theorem 6 7 Descartes did not provide the reasoning through which he found this relation 8 Japanese mathematics frequently concerned problems involving circles and their tangencies 9 and Japanese mathematician Yamaji Nushizumi stated a form of Descartes circle theorem in 1751 Like Descartes he expressed it as a polynomial equation on the radii rather than their curvatures 10 11 The special case of this theorem for one straight line and three circles was recorded on a Japanese sangaku tablet from 1824 12 Descartes theorem was rediscovered in 1826 by Jakob Steiner 13 in 1842 by Philip Beecroft 14 and in 1936 by Frederick Soddy Soddy chose to format his version of the theorem as a poem The Kiss Precise and published it in Nature The kissing circles in this problem are sometimes known as Soddy circles Soddy also extended the theorem to spheres 1 and in another poem described the chain of six spheres each tangent to its neighbors and to three given mutually tangent spheres a configuration now called Soddy s hexlet 15 16 Thorold Gosset and several others extended the theorem and the poem to arbitrary dimensions Gosset s version was published the following year 17 18 The generalization is sometimes called the Soddy Gosset theorem 19 although both the hexlet and the three dimensional version were known earlier in sangaku and in the 1886 work of Robert Lachlan 12 20 21 Multiple proofs of the theorem have been published Steiner s proof uses Pappus chains and Viviani s theorem Proofs by Philip Beecroft and by H S M Coxeter involve four more circles passing through triples of tangencies of the original three circles Coxeter also provided a proof using inversive geometry Additional proofs involve arguments based on symmetry calculations in exterior algebra or algebraic manipulation of Heron s formula for which see Soddy circles of a triangle 22 23 The result also follows from the observation that the Cayley Menger determinant of the four coplanar circle centers is zero 24 Statement edit nbsp Here as all three circles are tangent to each other at the same point Descartes theorem does not apply Descartes theorem is most easily stated in terms of the circles curvatures 25 The signed curvature or bend of a circle is defined as k 1 r displaystyle k pm 1 r nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp is its radius The larger a circle the smaller is the magnitude of its curvature and vice versa The sign in k 1 r displaystyle k pm 1 r nbsp represented by the displaystyle pm nbsp symbol is positive for a circle that is externally tangent to the other circles For an internally tangent circle that circumscribes the other circles the sign is negative If a straight line is considered a degenerate circle with zero curvature and thus infinite radius Descartes theorem also applies to a line and three circles that are all three mutually tangent see Generalized circle 1 For four circles that are tangent to each other at six distinct points with curvatures ki displaystyle k i nbsp for i 1 4 displaystyle i 1 dots 4 nbsp Descartes theorem says k1 k2 k3 k4 2 2 k12 k22 k32 k42 displaystyle k 1 k 2 k 3 k 4 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 k 4 2 nbsp 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp If one of the four curvatures is considered to be a variable and the rest to be constants this is a quadratic equation To find the radius of a fourth circle tangent to three given kissing circles the quadratic equation can be solved as 13 26 k4 k1 k2 k3 2k1k2 k2k3 k3k1 displaystyle k 4 k 1 k 2 k 3 pm 2 sqrt k 1 k 2 k 2 k 3 k 3 k 1 nbsp 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp The displaystyle pm nbsp symbol indicates that in general this equation has two solutions and any triple of tangent circles has two tangent circles or degenerate straight lines Problem specific criteria may favor one of these two solutions over the other in any given problem 22 The theorem does not apply to systems of circles with more than two circles tangent to each other at the same point It requires that the points of tangency be distinct 8 When more than two circles are tangent at a single point there can be infinitely many such circles with arbitrary curvatures see pencil of circles 27 Locating the circle centers editTo determine a circle completely not only its radius or curvature but also its center must be known The relevant equation is expressed most clearly if the Cartesian coordinates x y displaystyle x y nbsp are interpreted as a complex number z x iy displaystyle z x iy nbsp The equation then looks similar to Descartes theorem and is therefore called the complex Descartes theorem Given four circles with curvatures ki displaystyle k i nbsp and centers zi displaystyle z i nbsp for i 1 2 3 4 displaystyle i in 1 2 3 4 nbsp the following equality holds in addition to equation 1 k1z1 k2z2 k3z3 k4z4 2 2 k12z12 k22z22 k32z32 k42z42 displaystyle k 1 z 1 k 2 z 2 k 3 z 3 k 4 z 4 2 2 k 1 2 z 1 2 k 2 2 z 2 2 k 3 2 z 3 2 k 4 2 z 4 2 nbsp 3 displaystyle 3 nbsp Once k4 displaystyle k 4 nbsp has been found using equation 2 one may proceed to calculate z4 displaystyle z 4 nbsp by solving equation 3 as a quadratic equation leading to a form similar to equation 2 z4 z1k1 z2k2 z3k3 2k1k2z1z2 k2k3z2z3 k1k3z1z3k4 displaystyle z 4 frac z 1 k 1 z 2 k 2 z 3 k 3 pm 2 sqrt k 1 k 2 z 1 z 2 k 2 k 3 z 2 z 3 k 1 k 3 z 1 z 3 k 4 nbsp Again in general there are two solutions for z4 displaystyle z 4 nbsp corresponding to the two solutions for k4 displaystyle k 4 nbsp The plus minus sign in the above formula for z4 displaystyle z 4 nbsp does not necessarily correspond to the plus minus sign in the formula for k4 displaystyle k 4 nbsp 19 28 29 Special cases edit nbsp Three congruent mutually tangent circles of curvatures k 1 3 are all tangent to two circles of respective curvatures k 3 2 Three congruent circles edit When three of the four circles are congruent their centers form an equilateral triangle as do their points of tangency The two possibilities for a fourth circle tangent to all three are concentric and equation 2 reduces to 30 k4 3 23 k1 displaystyle k 4 3 pm 2 sqrt 3 k 1 nbsp One or more straight lines edit nbsp Descartes theorem still applies when one of the circles is replaced by a straight line of zero curvature If one of the three circles is replaced by a straight line tangent to the remaining circles then its curvature is zero and drops out of equation 1 For instance if k3 0 displaystyle k 3 0 nbsp then equation 1 can be factorized as 31 k1 k2 k4 k2 k4 k1 k1 k4 k2 k1 k2 k4 0 displaystyle begin aligned amp bigl sqrt k 1 sqrt k 2 sqrt k 4 bigr bigl sqrt k 2 sqrt k 4 sqrt k 1 bigr 3mu amp quad cdot bigl sqrt k 1 sqrt k 4 sqrt k 2 bigr bigl sqrt k 1 sqrt k 2 sqrt k 4 bigr 0 end aligned nbsp and equation 2 simplifies to 32 k4 k1 k2 2k1k2 displaystyle k 4 k 1 k 2 pm 2 sqrt k 1 k 2 nbsp Taking the square root of both sides leads to another alternative formulation of this case with k1 k2 displaystyle k 1 geq k 2 nbsp k4 k1 k2 displaystyle sqrt k 4 sqrt k 1 pm sqrt k 2 nbsp which has been described as a sort of demented version of the Pythagorean theorem 25 If two circles are replaced by lines the tangency between the two replaced circles becomes a parallelism between their two replacement lines In this case with k2 k3 0 displaystyle k 2 k 3 0 nbsp equation 2 is reduced to the trivialk4 k1 displaystyle displaystyle k 4 k 1 nbsp This corresponds to the observation that for all four curves to remain mutually tangent the other two circles must be congruent 19 26 Integer curvatures edit nbsp An Apollonian gasket with integer curvatures generated by four mutually tangent circles with curvatures 10 the outer circle 18 23 and 27When four tangent circles described by equation 2 all have integer curvatures the alternative fourth circle described by the second solution to the equation must also have an integer curvature This is because both solutions differ from an integer by the square root of an integer and so either solution can only be an integer if this square root and hence the other solution is also an integer Every four integers that satisfy the equation in Descartes theorem form the curvatures of four tangent circles 33 Integer quadruples of this type are also closely related to Heronian triangles triangles with integer sides and area 34 Starting with any four mutually tangent circles and repeatedly replacing one of the four with its alternative solution Vieta jumping in all possible ways leads to a system of infinitely many tangent circles called an Apollonian gasket When the initial four circles have integer curvatures so does each replacement and therefore all of the circles in the gasket have integer curvatures Any four tangent circles with integer curvatures belong to exactly one such gasket uniquely described by its root quadruple of the largest four largest circles and four smallest curvatures This quadruple can be found starting from any other quadruple from the same gasket by repeatedly replacing the smallest circle by a larger one that solves the same Descartes equation until no such reduction is possible 33 A root quadruple is said to be primitive if it has no nontrivial common divisor Every primitive root quadruple can be found from a factorization of a sum of two squares n2 m2 de displaystyle n 2 m 2 de nbsp as the quadruple n d n e n d e n 2m displaystyle n d n e n d e n 2m nbsp To be primitive it must satisfy the additional conditions gcd n d e 1 displaystyle gcd n d e 1 nbsp and n 0 2m d e displaystyle n leq 0 leq 2m leq d leq e nbsp Factorizations of sums of two squares can be obtained using the sum of two squares theorem Any other integer Apollonian gasket can be formed by multiplying a primitive root quadruple by an arbitrary integer and any quadruple in one of these gaskets that is any integer solution to the Descartes equation can be formed by reversing the replacement process used to find the root quadruple For instance the gasket with root quadruple 10 18 23 27 displaystyle 10 18 23 27 nbsp shown in the figure is generated in this way from the factorized sum of two squares 102 22 8 13 displaystyle 10 2 2 2 8 cdot 13 nbsp 33 Ford circles edit nbsp Ford circles in the unit intervalMain article Ford circle The special cases of one straight line and integer curvatures combine in the Ford circles These are an infinite family of circles tangent to the x displaystyle x nbsp axis of the Cartesian coordinate system at its rational points Each fraction p q displaystyle p q nbsp in lowest terms has a circle tangent to the line at the point p q 0 displaystyle p q 0 nbsp with curvature 2q2 displaystyle 2q 2 nbsp Three of these curvatures together with the zero curvature of the axis meet the conditions of Descartes theorem whenever the denominators of two of the corresponding fractions sum to the denominator of the third The two Ford circles for fractions p q displaystyle p q nbsp and r s displaystyle r s nbsp both in lowest terms are tangent when ps qr 1 displaystyle ps qr 1 nbsp When they are tangent they form a quadruple of tangent circles with the x displaystyle x nbsp axis and with the circle for their mediant p r q s displaystyle p r q s nbsp 35 The Ford circles belong to a special Apollonian gasket with root quadruple 0 0 1 1 displaystyle 0 0 1 1 nbsp bounded between two parallel lines which may be taken as the x displaystyle x nbsp axis and the line y 1 displaystyle y 1 nbsp This is the only Apollonian gasket containing a straight line and not bounded within a negative curvature circle The Ford circles are the circles in this gasket that are tangent to the x displaystyle x nbsp axis 33 Geometric progression edit Main article Coxeter s loxodromic sequence of tangent circles nbsp Coxeter s loxodromic sequence of tangent circles Each circle is labeled by an integer i its position in the sequence it has radius ri and curvature r i When the four radii of the circles in Descartes theorem are assumed to be in a geometric progression with ratio r displaystyle rho nbsp the curvatures are also in the same progression in reverse Plugging this ratio into the theorem gives the equation2 1 r2 r4 r6 1 r r2 r3 2 displaystyle 2 1 rho 2 rho 4 rho 6 1 rho rho 2 rho 3 2 nbsp which has only one real solution greater than one the ratior f f 2 89005 displaystyle rho varphi sqrt varphi approx 2 89005 nbsp where f displaystyle varphi nbsp is the golden ratio If the same progression is continued in both directions each consecutive four numbers describe circles obeying Descartes theorem The resulting double ended geometric progression of circles can be arranged into a single spiral pattern of tangent circles called Coxeter s loxodromic sequence of tangent circles It was first described together with analogous constructions in higher dimensions by H S M Coxeter in 1968 36 37 Soddy circles of a triangle editMain article Soddy circles of a triangle Any triangle in the plane has three externally tangent circles centered at its vertices Letting A B C displaystyle A B C nbsp be the three points a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp be the lengths of the opposite sides and s 12 a b c textstyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c nbsp be the semiperimeter these three circles have radii s a s b s c displaystyle s a s b s c nbsp By Descartes theorem two more circles sometimes called Soddy circles are tangent to these three circles They are separated by the incircle one interior to it and one exterior 38 39 40 Descartes theorem can be used to show that the inner Soddy circle s curvature is 4R r 2s D textstyle 4R r 2s Delta nbsp where D displaystyle Delta nbsp is the triangle s area R displaystyle R nbsp is its circumradius and r displaystyle r nbsp is its inradius The outer Soddy circle has curvature 4R r 2s D textstyle 4R r 2s Delta nbsp 41 The inner curvature is always positive but the outer curvature can be positive negative or zero Triangles whose outer circle degenerates to a straight line with curvature zero have been called Soddyian triangles 41 nbsp Four triangles with vertices at the centers of Soddy circlesOne of the many proofs of Descartes theorem is based on this connection to triangle geometry and on Heron s formula for the area of a triangle as a function of its side lengths If three circles are externally tangent with radii r1 r2 r3 displaystyle r 1 r 2 r 3 nbsp then their centers P1 P2 P3 displaystyle P 1 P 2 P 3 nbsp form the vertices of a triangle with side lengths r1 r2 displaystyle r 1 r 2 nbsp r1 r3 displaystyle r 1 r 3 nbsp and r2 r3 displaystyle r 2 r 3 nbsp and semiperimeter r1 r2 r3 displaystyle r 1 r 2 r 3 nbsp By Heron s formula this triangle P1P2P3 displaystyle triangle P 1 P 2 P 3 nbsp has arear1r2r3 r1 r2 r3 displaystyle sqrt r 1 r 2 r 3 r 1 r 2 r 3 nbsp Now consider the inner Soddy circle with radius r4 displaystyle r 4 nbsp centered at point P4 displaystyle P 4 nbsp inside the triangle Triangle P1P2P3 displaystyle triangle P 1 P 2 P 3 nbsp can be broken into three smaller triangles P1P2P4 displaystyle triangle P 1 P 2 P 4 nbsp P4P2P3 displaystyle triangle P 4 P 2 P 3 nbsp and P1P4P3 displaystyle triangle P 1 P 4 P 3 nbsp whose areas can be obtained by substituting r4 displaystyle r 4 nbsp for one of the other radii in the area formula above The area of the first triangle equals the sum of these three areas r1r2r3 r1 r2 r3 r1r2r4 r1 r2 r4 r1r3r4 r1 r3 r4 r2r3r4 r2 r3 r4 displaystyle begin aligned sqrt r 1 r 2 r 3 r 1 r 2 r 3 amp sqrt r 1 r 2 r 4 r 1 r 2 r 4 amp sqrt r 1 r 3 r 4 r 1 r 3 r 4 amp sqrt r 2 r 3 r 4 r 2 r 3 r 4 end aligned nbsp Careful algebraic manipulation shows that this formula is equivalent to equation 1 Descartes theorem 22 nbsp Here the outer Soddy center lies outside the triangleThis analysis covers all cases in which four circles are externally tangent one is always the inner Soddy circle of the other three The cases in which one of the circles is internally tangent to the other three and forms their outer Soddy circle are similar Again the four centers P1 P2 P3 P4 displaystyle P 1 P 2 P 3 P 4 nbsp form four triangles but letting P4 displaystyle P 4 nbsp be the center of the outer Soddy circle the triangle sides incident to P4 displaystyle P 4 nbsp have lengths that are differences of radii r4 r1 displaystyle r 4 r 1 nbsp r4 r1 displaystyle r 4 r 1 nbsp and r4 r3 displaystyle r 4 r 3 nbsp rather than sums P4 displaystyle P 4 nbsp may lie inside or outside the triangle formed by the other three centers when it is inside this triangle s area equals the sum of the other three triangle areas as above When it is outside the quadrilateral formed by the four centers can be subdivided by a diagonal into two triangles in two different ways giving an equality between the sum of two triangle areas and the sum of the other two triangle areas In every case the area equation reduces to Descartes theorem This method does not apply directly to the cases in which one of the circles degenerates to a line but those can be handled as a limiting case of circles 22 Generalizations editArbitrary four circle configurations edit Descartes theorem can be expressed as a matrix equation and then generalized to other configurations of four oriented circles by changing the matrix Let k displaystyle mathbf k nbsp be a column vector of the four circle curvatures and let Q displaystyle mathbf Q nbsp be a symmetric matrix whose coefficients qi j displaystyle q i j nbsp represent the relative orientation between the i th and j th oriented circles at their intersection point Q 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Q 1 14 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 displaystyle mathbf Q begin bmatrix phantom 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 1 amp phantom 1 amp 1 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp phantom 1 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp phantom 1 end bmatrix qquad mathbf Q 1 frac 1 4 begin bmatrix phantom 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 1 amp phantom 1 amp 1 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp phantom 1 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp phantom 1 end bmatrix nbsp Then equation 1 can be rewritten as the matrix equation 19 42 kTQ 1k 0 displaystyle mathbf k mathsf T mathbf Q 1 mathbf k 0 nbsp As a generalization of Descartes theorem a modified symmetric matrix Q displaystyle mathbf Q nbsp can represent any desired configuration of four circles by replacing each coefficient with the inclination qi j displaystyle q i j nbsp between two circles defined asqi j ri2 rj2 di j22rirj displaystyle q i j frac r i 2 r j 2 d i j 2 2r i r j nbsp where ri rj displaystyle r i r j nbsp are the respective radii of the circles and di j displaystyle d i j nbsp is the Euclidean distance between their centers 43 44 45 When the circles intersect qi j cos 8i j displaystyle q i j cos theta i j nbsp the cosine of the intersection angle between the circles The inclination sometimes called inversive distance is 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp when the circles are tangent and oriented the same way at their point of tangency 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp when the two circles are tangent and oriented oppositely at the point of tangency 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp for orthogonal circles outside the interval 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 nbsp for non intersecting circles and displaystyle infty nbsp in the limit as one circle degenerates to a point 42 37 The equation kTQ 1k 0 displaystyle mathbf k mathsf T mathbf Q 1 mathbf k 0 nbsp is satisfied for any arbitrary configuration of four circles in the plane provided Q displaystyle mathbf Q nbsp is the appropriate matrix of pairwise inclinations 42 Spherical and hyperbolic geometry edit nbsp A special case of Descartes theorem on the sphere has three circles of radius 60 k 1 3 in blue for which both circles touching all three in green have the same radius 30 k 3 Descartes theorem generalizes to mutually tangent great or small circles in spherical geometry if the curvature of the j displaystyle j nbsp th circle is defined as kj cot rj textstyle k j cot rho j nbsp the cotangent of the oriented intrinsic radius rj displaystyle rho j nbsp Then 44 19 k1 k2 k3 k4 2 2 k12 k22 k32 k42 4 displaystyle k 1 k 2 k 3 k 4 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 k 4 2 4 nbsp Solving for one of the curvatures in terms of the other three k4 k1 k2 k3 2k1k2 k2k3 k3k1 1 displaystyle k 4 k 1 k 2 k 3 pm 2 sqrt k 1 k 2 k 2 k 3 k 3 k 1 1 nbsp As a matrix equation kTQ 1k 1 displaystyle mathbf k mathsf T mathbf Q 1 mathbf k 1 nbsp The quantity 1 kj tan rj displaystyle 1 k j tan rho j nbsp is the stereographic diameter of a small circle This is the Euclidean length of the diameter in the stereographically projected plane when some point on the circle is projected to the origin For a great circle such a stereographic projection is a straight line through the origin so kj 0 displaystyle k j 0 nbsp 46 nbsp Four generalized circles through the origin of the Poincare disk model of the hyperbolic plane Circle blue horocycle red hypercycle purple and geodesic green The boundary of ideal points is represented with a dashed stroke and the shaded region is outside the plane Likewise the theorem generalizes to mutually tangent circles in hyperbolic geometry if the curvature of the j displaystyle j nbsp th cycle is defined as kj coth rj textstyle k j coth rho j nbsp the hyperbolic cotangent of the oriented intrinsic radius rj displaystyle rho j nbsp Then 19 44 k1 k2 k3 k4 2 2 k12 k22 k32 k42 4 displaystyle k 1 k 2 k 3 k 4 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 k 4 2 4 nbsp Solving for one of the curvatures in terms of the other three k4 k1 k2 k3 2k1k2 k2k3 k3k1 1 displaystyle k 4 k 1 k 2 k 3 pm 2 sqrt k 1 k 2 k 2 k 3 k 3 k 1 1 nbsp As a matrix equation kTQ 1k 1 displaystyle mathbf k mathsf T mathbf Q 1 mathbf k 1 nbsp This formula also holds for mutually tangent configurations in hyperbolic geometry including hypercycles and horocycles if kj displaystyle k j nbsp is taken to be the reciprocal of the stereographic diameter of the cycle This is the diameter under stereographic projection the Poincare disk model when one endpoint of the diameter is projected to the origin 47 Hypercycles do not have a well defined center or intrinsic radius and horocycles have an ideal point for a center and infinite intrinsic radius but kj gt 1 displaystyle k j gt 1 nbsp for a hyperbolic circle kj 1 displaystyle k j 1 nbsp for a horocycle kj lt 1 displaystyle k j lt 1 nbsp for a hypercycle and kj 0 displaystyle k j 0 nbsp for a geodesic 48 Higher dimensions edit nbsp Soddy s hexlet Any pair of adjacent green spheres together with the two red spheres and the outer gray sphere satisfy the three dimensional case of Descartes theorem In n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional Euclidean space the maximum number of mutually tangent hyperspheres is n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp For example in 3 dimensional space five spheres can be mutually tangent The curvatures of the hyperspheres satisfy i 1n 2ki 2 n i 1n 2ki2 displaystyle biggl sum i 1 n 2 k i biggr 2 n sum i 1 n 2 k i 2 nbsp with the case ki 0 displaystyle k i 0 nbsp corresponding to a flat hyperplane generalizing the 2 dimensional version of the theorem 19 44 Although there is no 3 dimensional analogue of the complex numbers the relationship between the positions of the centers can be re expressed as a matrix equation which also generalizes to n displaystyle n nbsp dimensions 19 In three dimensions suppose that three mutually tangent spheres are fixed and a fourth sphere S1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp is given tangent to the three fixed spheres The three dimensional version of Descartes theorem can be applied to find a sphere S2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp tangent to S1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp and the fixed spheres then applied again to find a new sphere S3 displaystyle S 3 nbsp tangent to S2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp and the fixed spheres and so on The result is a cyclic sequence of six spheres each tangent to its neighbors in the sequence and to the three fixed spheres a configuration called Soddy s hexlet after Soddy s discovery and publication of it in the form of another poem in 1936 15 16 Higher dimensional configurations of mutually tangent hyperspheres in spherical or hyperbolic geometry with curvatures defined as above satisfy i 1n 2ki 2 nC n i 1n 2ki2 displaystyle biggl sum i 1 n 2 k i biggr 2 nC n sum i 1 n 2 k i 2 nbsp where C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp in spherical geometry and C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp in hyperbolic geometry 44 19 See also editCircle packing in a circle Euler s four square identity Malfatti circlesReferences edit a b c Soddy F June 1936 The Kiss Precise Nature 137 3477 1021 Bibcode 1936Natur 137 1021S doi 10 1038 1371021a0 S2CID 6012051 Hogendijk Jan P 1986 Arabic traces of lost works of Apollonius Archive for History of Exact Sciences 35 3 187 253 doi 10 1007 BF00357307 JSTOR 41133783 MR 0851067 S2CID 121613986 Court Nathan Altshiller October 1961 The problem of Apollonius The Mathematics Teacher 54 6 444 452 doi 10 5951 MT 54 6 0444 JSTOR 27956431 Boyer Carl B 2004 1956 Chapter 5 Fermat and Descartes History of Analytic Geometry Dover Publications pp 74 102 ISBN 978 0 486 43832 0 Descartes Rene 1901 Adam Charles Tannery Paul eds Oeuvres de Descartes in French vol 4 Correspondance Juillet 1643 Avril 1647 Paris Leopold Cerf 325 Descartes a Elisabeth pp 37 42 328 Descartes a Elisabeth pp 45 50 Bos Erik Jan 2010 Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia and Descartes letters 1650 1665 Historia Mathematica 37 3 485 502 doi 10 1016 j hm 2009 11 004 Shapiro Lisa 2007 The Correspondence between Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and Rene Descartes The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe University of Chicago Press pp 37 39 73 77 ISBN 978 0 226 20444 4 Mackenzie Dana March April 2023 The princess and the philosopher American Scientist vol 111 no 2 pp 80 84 ProQuest 2779946948 a b Coxeter H S M January 1968 The problem of Apollonius The American Mathematical Monthly 75 1 5 15 doi 10 1080 00029890 1968 11970941 JSTOR 2315097 Yanagihara K 1913 On some geometrical propositions in Wasan the Japanese native mathematics Tohoku Mathematical Journal 3 87 95 JFM 44 0052 02 Michiwaki Yoshimasa 2008 Geometry in Japanese mathematics in Selin Helaine ed Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Springer Netherlands pp 1018 1019 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 4425 0 9133 ISBN 978 1 4020 4559 2 Takinami Susumu Michiwaki Yoshimasa 1984 On the Descartes circle theorem PDF Journal for History of Mathematics 1 1 Korean Society for History of Mathematics 1 8 a b Rothman Tony Fugakawa Hidetoshi May 1998 Japanese temple geometry Scientific American 278 5 84 91 Bibcode 1998SciAm 278e 84R doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0598 84 JSTOR 26057787 see top illustration p 86 Another tablet from 1822 center p 88 concerns Soddy s hexlet a configuration of three dimensional tangent spheres a b Steiner Jakob January 1826 Fortsetzung der geometrischen Betrachtungen Heft 2 S 161 Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1826 1 pp 252 288 fig 2 25 taf III doi 10 1515 crll 1826 1 252 S2CID 121590578 Beecroft Philip 1842 Properties of circles in mutual contact The Lady s and Gentleman s Diary 139 91 96 a b Soddy Frederick December 1936 The hexlet Nature 138 3501 958 Bibcode 1936Natur 138 958S doi 10 1038 138958a0 S2CID 28170211 a b Barnes John 2012 Soddy s hexlet Gems of Geometry 2nd ed Heidelberg Springer pp 173 177 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 30964 9 ISBN 978 3 642 30963 2 MR 2963305 Gardner Martin May 1968 Mathematical Games Circles and spheres and how they kiss and pack Scientific American 218 5 130 139 doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0568 130 JSTOR 24926234 The Kiss Precise Nature 139 3506 62 January 1937 Bibcode 1937Natur 139Q 62 doi 10 1038 139062a0 a b c d e f g h i Lagarias Jeffrey C Mallows Colin L Wilks Allan R 2002 Beyond the Descartes circle theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 109 4 338 361 arXiv math 0101066 doi 10 2307 2695498 JSTOR 2695498 MR 1903421 Hidetoshi Fukagawa Kazunori Horibe 2014 Sangaku Japanese Mathematics and Art in the 18th 19th and 20th Centuries in Greenfield Gary Hart George Sarhangi Reza eds Bridges Seoul Conference Proceedings Tessellations Publishing pp 111 118 Lachlan R 1886 On Systems of Circles and Spheres Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 177 481 625 JSTOR 109492 see Spheres touching one another pp 585 587 a b c d Levrie Paul 2019 A straightforward proof of Descartes s circle theorem The Mathematical Intelligencer 41 3 24 27 doi 10 1007 s00283 019 09883 x hdl 10067 1621880151162165141 MR 3995314 S2CID 253818666 Pedoe Daniel 1967 On a theorem in geometry The American Mathematical Monthly 74 6 627 640 doi 10 2307 2314247 JSTOR 2314247 MR 0215169 Bradford Alden 2023 An even more straightforward proof of Descartes s circle theorem The Mathematical Intelligencer 45 3 263 265 arXiv 2211 05539 doi 10 1007 s00283 022 10234 6 MR 4645170 a b Mackenzie Dana January February 2010 A tisket a tasket an Apollonian gasket Computing Science American Scientist vol 98 no 1 pp 10 14 JSTOR 27859441 All of these reciprocals look a little bit extravagant so the formula is usually simplified by writing it in terms of the curvatures or the bends of the circles a b Wilker J B 1969 Four proofs of a generalization of the Descartes circle theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 76 3 278 282 doi 10 2307 2316373 JSTOR 2316373 MR 0246207 Glaeser Georg Stachel Hellmuth Odehnal Boris 2016 The parabolic pencil a common line element The Universe of Conics Springer p 327 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 45450 3 ISBN 978 3 662 45449 7 Northshield Sam 2014 Complex Descartes circle theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 121 10 927 931 doi 10 4169 amer math monthly 121 10 927 hdl 1951 69912 JSTOR 10 4169 amer math monthly 121 10 927 MR 3295667 S2CID 16335704 Tupan Alexandru 2022 On the complex Descartes circle theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 129 9 876 879 doi 10 1080 00029890 2022 2104084 MR 4499753 S2CID 251417228 This is a special case of a formula for the radii of circles in a Steiner chain with concentric inner and outer circles given by Sheydvasser Arseniy 2023 3 1 Steiner s porism and 3 6 Steiner s porism revisited Linear Fractional Transformations Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics Springer International Publishing pp 75 81 99 101 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 25002 6 ISBN 978 3 031 25001 9 S2CID 258177153 Hajja Mowaffaq 2009 93 33 on a Morsel of Ross Honsberger The Mathematical Gazette 93 527 309 312 JSTOR 40378744 Dergiades Nikolaos 2007 The Soddy circles PDF Forum Geometricorum 7 191 197 MR 2373402 a b c d Graham Ronald L Lagarias Jeffrey C Mallows Colin L Wilks Allan R Yan Catherine H 2003 Apollonian circle packings number theory Journal of Number Theory 100 1 1 45 arXiv math 0009113 doi 10 1016 S0022 314X 03 00015 5 MR 1971245 S2CID 16607718 Bradley Christopher J March 2003 Heron triangles and touching circles The Mathematical Gazette 87 508 36 41 doi 10 1017 s0025557200172080 JSTOR 3620562 S2CID 125024700 McGonagle Annmarie Northshield Sam 2014 A new parameterization of Ford circles Pi Mu Epsilon Journal 13 10 637 643 JSTOR 24345283 MR 3235834 Coxeter H S M 1968 Loxodromic sequences of tangent spheres Aequationes Mathematicae 1 1 2 104 121 doi 10 1007 BF01817563 MR 0235456 S2CID 119897862 a b Weiss Asia 1981 On Coxeter s Loxodromic Sequences of Tangent Spheres in Davis Chandler Grunbaum Branko Sherk F A eds The Geometric Vein The Coxeter Festschrift Springer pp 241 250 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 5648 9 16 ISBN 978 1 4612 5650 2 Lemoine Emile 1891 Sur les triangles orthologiques et sur divers sujets de la geometrie du triangle On orthologic triangles and on various subjects of triangle geometry Compte rendu de la 19me session de l association francaise pour l avancement des sciences pt 2 Congres de Limoges 1890 in French Paris Secretariat de l association pp 111 146 especially 4 Sur les intersections deux a deux des coniques qui ont pour foyers deux sommets d un triangle et passent par le troisieme On the intersections in pairs of the conics which have as foci two vertices of a triangle and pass through the third pp 128 144 Veldkamp G R 1985 The Isoperimetric Point and the Point s of Equal Detour in a Triangle The American Mathematical Monthly 92 8 546 558 doi 10 1080 00029890 1985 11971677 JSTOR 2323159 Garcia Ronaldo Reznik Dan Moses Peter Gheorghe Liliana 2022 Triads of conics associated with a triangle KoG 26 Croatian Society for Geometry and Graphics 16 32 arXiv 2112 15232 doi 10 31896 k 26 2 S2CID 245634505 a b Jackson Frank M 2013 Soddyian Triangles PDF Forum Geometricorum 13 1 6 a b c Kocik Jerzy 2007 A theorem on circle configurations arXiv 0706 0372 Kocik Jerzy 2010 Golden window PDF Mathematics Magazine 83 5 384 390 JSTOR 10 4169 002557010x529815 doi 10 4169 002557010x529815 Kocik Jerzy 2019 Proof of Descartes circle formula and its generalization clarified arXiv 1910 09174 Coolidge Julian Lowell 1916 X The Oriented Circle A Treatise on the Circle and the Sphere Clarendon pp 351 407 also see p 109 p 408 a b c d e Mauldon J G 1962 Sets of equally inclined spheres Canadian Journal of Mathematics 14 509 516 doi 10 4153 CJM 1962 042 6 Rigby J F 1981 The geometry of cycles and generalized Laguerre inversion in Davis Chandler Grunbaum Branko Sherk F A eds The Geometric Vein The Coxeter Festschrift Springer pp 355 378 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 5648 9 26 ISBN 978 1 4612 5650 2 A definition of stereographic distance can be found in Li Hongbo Hestenes David Rockwood Alyn 2001 Spherical conformal geometry with geometric algebra PDF Geometric Computing with Clifford Algebras Springer pp 61 75 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 412 4949 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 04621 0 3 ISBN 978 3 642 07442 4 archived from the original PDF on 2023 06 04 retrieved 2023 06 04 This concept of distance was called the pseudo chordal distance for the complex unit disk as a model for the hyperbolic plane by Caratheodory Constantin 1954 1950 1 3 86 88 Chordal and Pseudo chordal Distance Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable vol I translated by Steinhardt Fritz Chelsea pp 81 86 MR 0060009 Eriksson Nicholas Lagarias Jeffrey C 2007 Apollonian Circle Packings Number Theory II Spherical and Hyperbolic Packings The Ramanujan Journal 14 3 437 469 arXiv math 0403296 doi 10 1007 s11139 007 9052 6 S2CID 14024662 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Descartes 27 theorem amp oldid 1215969291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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