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Incircle and excircles

In geometry, the incircle or inscribed circle of a triangle is the largest circle that can be contained in the triangle; it touches (is tangent to) the three sides. The center of the incircle is a triangle center called the triangle's incenter.[1]

Incircle and excircles of a triangle.
  Extended sides of triangle ABC
  Incircle (incenter at I)
  Excircles (excenters at JA, JB, JC)
  Internal angle bisectors
  External angle bisectors (forming the excentral triangle)

An excircle or escribed circle[2] of the triangle is a circle lying outside the triangle, tangent to one of its sides and tangent to the extensions of the other two. Every triangle has three distinct excircles, each tangent to one of the triangle's sides.[3]

The center of the incircle, called the incenter, can be found as the intersection of the three internal angle bisectors.[3][4] The center of an excircle is the intersection of the internal bisector of one angle (at vertex A, for example) and the external bisectors of the other two. The center of this excircle is called the excenter relative to the vertex A, or the excenter of A.[3] Because the internal bisector of an angle is perpendicular to its external bisector, it follows that the center of the incircle together with the three excircle centers form an orthocentric system.[5] but not all polygons do; those that do are tangential polygons. See also tangent lines to circles.

Incircle and incenter edit

Suppose   has an incircle with radius   and center  . Let   be the length of  ,   the length of  , and   the length of  . Also let  ,  , and   be the touchpoints where the incircle touches  ,  , and  .

Incenter edit

The incenter is the point where the internal angle bisectors of   meet.

The distance from vertex   to the incenter   is:[citation needed]

 

Trilinear coordinates edit

The trilinear coordinates for a point in the triangle is the ratio of all the distances to the triangle sides. Because the incenter is the same distance from all sides of the triangle, the trilinear coordinates for the incenter are[6]

 

Barycentric coordinates edit

The barycentric coordinates for a point in a triangle give weights such that the point is the weighted average of the triangle vertex positions. Barycentric coordinates for the incenter are given by

 

where  ,  , and   are the lengths of the sides of the triangle, or equivalently (using the law of sines) by

 

where  ,  , and   are the angles at the three vertices.

Cartesian coordinates edit

The Cartesian coordinates of the incenter are a weighted average of the coordinates of the three vertices using the side lengths of the triangle relative to the perimeter (that is, using the barycentric coordinates given above, normalized to sum to unity) as weights. The weights are positive so the incenter lies inside the triangle as stated above. If the three vertices are located at  ,  , and  , and the sides opposite these vertices have corresponding lengths  ,  , and  , then the incenter is at[citation needed]

 

Radius edit

The inradius   of the incircle in a triangle with sides of length  ,  ,   is given by[7]

 

where   is the semiperimeter.

The tangency points of the incircle divide the sides into segments of lengths     and  [8]

See Heron's formula.

Distances to the vertices edit

Denoting the incenter of   as  , the distances from the incenter to the vertices combined with the lengths of the triangle sides obey the equation[9]

 

Additionally,[10]

 

where   and   are the triangle's circumradius and inradius respectively.

Other properties edit

The collection of triangle centers may be given the structure of a group under coordinate-wise multiplication of trilinear coordinates; in this group, the incenter forms the identity element.[6]

Incircle and its radius properties edit

Distances between vertex and nearest touchpoints edit

The distances from a vertex to the two nearest touchpoints are equal; for example:[11]

 

Other properties edit

If the altitudes from sides of lengths  ,  , and   are  ,  , and  , then the inradius   is one-third of the harmonic mean of these altitudes; that is,[12]

 

The product of the incircle radius   and the circumcircle radius   of a triangle with sides  ,  , and   is[13]

 

Some relations among the sides, incircle radius, and circumcircle radius are:[14]

 

Any line through a triangle that splits both the triangle's area and its perimeter in half goes through the triangle's incenter (the center of its incircle). There are either one, two, or three of these for any given triangle.[15]

Denoting the center of the incircle of   as  , we have[16]

 

and[17]: 121, #84 

 

The incircle radius is no greater than one-ninth the sum of the altitudes.[18]: 289 

The squared distance from the incenter   to the circumcenter   is given by[19]: 232 

 

and the distance from the incenter to the center   of the nine point circle is[19]: 232 

 

The incenter lies in the medial triangle (whose vertices are the midpoints of the sides).[19]: 233, Lemma 1 

Relation to area of the triangle edit

The radius of the incircle is related to the area of the triangle.[20] The ratio of the area of the incircle to the area of the triangle is less than or equal to  , with equality holding only for equilateral triangles.[21]

Suppose   has an incircle with radius   and center  . Let   be the length of  ,   the length of  , and   the length of  . Now, the incircle is tangent to   at some point  , and so   is right. Thus, the radius   is an altitude of  . Therefore,   has base length   and height  , and so has area  . Similarly,   has area   and   has area  . Since these three triangles decompose  , we see that the area   is:

 
     and      

where   is the area of   and   is its semiperimeter.

For an alternative formula, consider  . This is a right-angled triangle with one side equal to   and the other side equal to  . The same is true for  . The large triangle is composed of six such triangles and the total area is:[citation needed]

 

Gergonne triangle and point edit

 
  Triangle ABC
  Incircle (incenter at I)
  Contact triangle TATBTC
  Lines between opposite vertices of ABC and TATBTC (concur at Gergonne point Ge)

The Gergonne triangle (of  ) is defined by the three touchpoints of the incircle on the three sides. The touchpoint opposite   is denoted  , etc.

This Gergonne triangle,  , is also known as the contact triangle or intouch triangle of  . Its area is

 

where  ,  , and   are the area, radius of the incircle, and semiperimeter of the original triangle, and  ,  , and   are the side lengths of the original triangle. This is the same area as that of the extouch triangle.[22]

The three lines  ,   and   intersect in a single point called the Gergonne point, denoted as   (or triangle center X7). The Gergonne point lies in the open orthocentroidal disk punctured at its own center, and can be any point therein.[23]

The Gergonne point of a triangle has a number of properties, including that it is the symmedian point of the Gergonne triangle.[24]

Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the intouch triangle are given by[citation needed]

 

Trilinear coordinates for the Gergonne point are given by[citation needed]

 

or, equivalently, by the Law of Sines,

 

Excircles and excenters edit

 
  Extended sides of ABC
  Incircle (incenter at I)
  Excircles (excenters at JA, JB, JC)
  Internal angle bisectors
  External angle bisectors (forming the excentral triangle)

An excircle or escribed circle[2] of the triangle is a circle lying outside the triangle, tangent to one of its sides and tangent to the extensions of the other two. Every triangle has three distinct excircles, each tangent to one of the triangle's sides.[3]

The center of an excircle is the intersection of the internal bisector of one angle (at vertex  , for example) and the external bisectors of the other two. The center of this excircle is called the excenter relative to the vertex  , or the excenter of  .[3] Because the internal bisector of an angle is perpendicular to its external bisector, it follows that the center of the incircle together with the three excircle centers form an orthocentric system.[5]

Trilinear coordinates of excenters edit

While the incenter of   has trilinear coordinates  , the excenters have trilinears [citation needed]

 

Exradii edit

The radii of the excircles are called the exradii.

The exradius of the excircle opposite   (so touching  , centered at  ) is[25][26]

 
where  

See Heron's formula.

Derivation of exradii formula edit

Source:[25]

Let the excircle at side   touch at side   extended at  , and let this excircle's radius be   and its center be  . Then   is an altitude of  , so   has area  . By a similar argument,   has area   and   has area  . Thus the area   of triangle   is

 
.

So, by symmetry, denoting   as the radius of the incircle,

 
.

By the Law of Cosines, we have

 

Combining this with the identity  , we have

 

But  , and so

 

which is Heron's formula.

Combining this with  , we have

 

Similarly,   gives

 

Other properties edit

From the formulas above one can see that the excircles are always larger than the incircle and that the largest excircle is the one tangent to the longest side and the smallest excircle is tangent to the shortest side. Further, combining these formulas yields:[27]

 

Other excircle properties edit

The circular hull of the excircles is internally tangent to each of the excircles and is thus an Apollonius circle.[28] The radius of this Apollonius circle is   where   is the incircle radius and   is the semiperimeter of the triangle.[29]

The following relations hold among the inradius  , the circumradius  , the semiperimeter  , and the excircle radii  ,  ,  :[14]

 

The circle through the centers of the three excircles has radius  .[14]

If   is the orthocenter of  , then[14]

 

Nagel triangle and Nagel point edit

 
  Extended sides of triangle ABC
  Excircles of ABC (tangent at TA. TB, TC)
  Nagel/Extouch triangle TATBTC
  Splitters: lines connecting opposite vertices of ABC and TATBTC (concur at Nagel point N)

The Nagel triangle or extouch triangle of   is denoted by the vertices  ,  , and   that are the three points where the excircles touch the reference   and where   is opposite of  , etc. This   is also known as the extouch triangle of  . The circumcircle of the extouch   is called the Mandart circle.[citation needed]

The three line segments  ,   and   are called the splitters of the triangle; they each bisect the perimeter of the triangle,[citation needed]

 

The splitters intersect in a single point, the triangle's Nagel point   (or triangle center X8).

Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the extouch triangle are given by[citation needed]

 

Trilinear coordinates for the Nagel point are given by[citation needed]

 

or, equivalently, by the Law of Sines,

 

The Nagel point is the isotomic conjugate of the Gergonne point.[citation needed]

Related constructions edit

Nine-point circle and Feuerbach point edit

 
The nine-point circle is tangent to the incircle and excircles

In geometry, the nine-point circle is a circle that can be constructed for any given triangle. It is so named because it passes through nine significant concyclic points defined from the triangle. These nine points are:[30][31]

In 1822, Karl Feuerbach discovered that any triangle's nine-point circle is externally tangent to that triangle's three excircles and internally tangent to its incircle; this result is known as Feuerbach's theorem. He proved that:[32]

... the circle which passes through the feet of the altitudes of a triangle is tangent to all four circles which in turn are tangent to the three sides of the triangle ... (Feuerbach 1822)

The triangle center at which the incircle and the nine-point circle touch is called the Feuerbach point.

Incentral and excentral triangles edit

The points of intersection of the interior angle bisectors of   with the segments  ,  , and   are the vertices of the incentral triangle. Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the incentral triangle   are given by[citation needed]

 

The excentral triangle of a reference triangle has vertices at the centers of the reference triangle's excircles. Its sides are on the external angle bisectors of the reference triangle (see figure at top of page). Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the excentral triangle   are given by[citation needed]

 

Equations for four circles edit

Let   be a variable point in trilinear coordinates, and let  ,  ,  . The four circles described above are given equivalently by either of the two given equations:[33]: 210–215 

  • Incircle:
     
  •  -excircle:
     
  •  -excircle:
     
  •  -excircle:
     

Euler's theorem edit

Euler's theorem states that in a triangle:

 

where   and   are the circumradius and inradius respectively, and   is the distance between the circumcenter and the incenter.

For excircles the equation is similar:

 

where   is the radius of one of the excircles, and   is the distance between the circumcenter and that excircle's center.[34][35][36]

Generalization to other polygons edit

Some (but not all) quadrilaterals have an incircle. These are called tangential quadrilaterals. Among their many properties perhaps the most important is that their two pairs of opposite sides have equal sums. This is called the Pitot theorem.[37]

More generally, a polygon with any number of sides that has an inscribed circle (that is, one that is tangent to each side) is called a tangential polygon.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kay (1969, p. 140)
  2. ^ a b Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 74)
  3. ^ a b c d e Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 73)
  4. ^ Kay (1969, p. 117)
  5. ^ a b Johnson 1929, p. 182.
  6. ^ a b Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers 2012-04-19 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 2014-10-28.
  7. ^ Kay (1969, p. 201)
  8. ^ Chu, Thomas, The Pentagon, Spring 2005, p. 45, problem 584.
  9. ^ Allaire, Patricia R.; Zhou, Junmin; Yao, Haishen (March 2012), "Proving a nineteenth century ellipse identity", Mathematical Gazette, 96: 161–165, doi:10.1017/S0025557200004277, S2CID 124176398.
  10. ^ Altshiller-Court, Nathan (1980), College Geometry, Dover Publications. #84, p. 121.
  11. ^ Mathematical Gazette, July 2003, 323-324.
  12. ^ Kay (1969, p. 203)
  13. ^ Johnson 1929, p. 189, #298(d).
  14. ^ a b c d Bell, Amy, "Hansen’s right triangle theorem, its converse and a generalization", Forum Geometricorum 6, 2006, 335–342.
  15. ^ Kodokostas, Dimitrios, "Triangle Equalizers," Mathematics Magazine 83, April 2010, pp. 141-146.
  16. ^ Allaire, Patricia R.; Zhou, Junmin; and Yao, Haishen, "Proving a nineteenth century ellipse identity", Mathematical Gazette 96, March 2012, 161-165.
  17. ^ Altshiller-Court, Nathan. College Geometry, Dover Publications, 1980.
  18. ^ Posamentier, Alfred S., and Lehmann, Ingmar. The Secrets of Triangles, Prometheus Books, 2012.
  19. ^ a b c Franzsen, William N. (2011). "The distance from the incenter to the Euler line" (PDF). Forum Geometricorum. 11: 231–236. MR 2877263..
  20. ^ Coxeter, H.S.M. "Introduction to Geometry 2nd ed. Wiley, 1961.
  21. ^ Minda, D., and Phelps, S., "Triangles, ellipses, and cubic polynomials", American Mathematical Monthly 115, October 2008, 679-689: Theorem 4.1.
  22. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Contact Triangle." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ContactTriangle.html
  23. ^ Christopher J. Bradley and Geoff C. Smith, "The locations of triangle centers", Forum Geometricorum 6 (2006), 57–70. http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2006volume6/FG200607index.html
  24. ^ Dekov, Deko (2009). (PDF). Journal of Computer-generated Euclidean Geometry. 1: 1–14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-05.
  25. ^ a b Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 79)
  26. ^ Kay (1969, p. 202)
  27. ^ Baker, Marcus, "A collection of formulae for the area of a plane triangle," Annals of Mathematics, part 1 in vol. 1(6), January 1885, 134-138. (See also part 2 in vol. 2(1), September 1885, 11-18.)
  28. ^ Grinberg, Darij, and Yiu, Paul, "The Apollonius Circle as a Tucker Circle", Forum Geometricorum 2, 2002: pp. 175-182.
  29. ^ Stevanovi´c, Milorad R., "The Apollonius circle and related triangle centers", Forum Geometricorum 3, 2003, 187-195.
  30. ^ Altshiller-Court (1925, pp. 103–110)
  31. ^ Kay (1969, pp. 18, 245)
  32. ^ Feuerbach, Karl Wilhelm; Buzengeiger, Carl Heribert Ignatz (1822), Eigenschaften einiger merkwürdigen Punkte des geradlinigen Dreiecks und mehrerer durch sie bestimmten Linien und Figuren. Eine analytisch-trigonometrische Abhandlung (Monograph ed.), Nürnberg: Wiessner.
  33. ^ Whitworth, William Allen. Trilinear Coordinates and Other Methods of Modern Analytical Geometry of Two Dimensions, Forgotten Books, 2012 (orig. Deighton, Bell, and Co., 1866). http://www.forgottenbooks.com/search?q=Trilinear+coordinates&t=books
  34. ^ Nelson, Roger, "Euler's triangle inequality via proof without words," Mathematics Magazine 81(1), February 2008, 58-61.
  35. ^ Johnson 1929, p. 187.
  36. ^ Emelyanov, Lev, and Emelyanova, Tatiana. "Euler’s formula and Poncelet’s porism", Forum Geometricorum 1, 2001: pp. 137–140.
  37. ^ Josefsson (2011, See in particular pp. 65–66.)

References edit

  • Altshiller-Court, Nathan (1925), College Geometry: An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle (2nd ed.), New York: Barnes & Noble, LCCN 52013504
  • Johnson, Roger A. (1929), "X. Inscribed and Escribed Circles", Modern Geometry, Houghton Mifflin, pp. 182–194
  • Josefsson, Martin (2011), "More characterizations of tangential quadrilaterals" (PDF), Forum Geometricorum, 11: 65–82, MR 2877281
  • Kay, David C. (1969), College Geometry, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, LCCN 69012075
  • Kimberling, Clark (1998). "Triangle Centers and Central Triangles". Congressus Numerantium (129): i–xxv, 1–295.
  • Kiss, Sándor (2006). "The Orthic-of-Intouch and Intouch-of-Orthic Triangles". Forum Geometricorum (6): 171–177.

External links edit

Interactive edit

  • Triangle incenter   Triangle incircle  Incircle of a regular polygon   With interactive animations
  • Constructing a triangle's incenter / incircle with compass and straightedge An interactive animated demonstration
  • Equal Incircles Theorem at cut-the-knot
  • Five Incircles Theorem at cut-the-knot
  • Pairs of Incircles in a Quadrilateral at cut-the-knot

incircle, excircles, incircle, redirects, here, incircles, triangle, polygons, tangential, quadrilateral, tangential, polygon, geometry, incircle, inscribed, circle, triangle, largest, circle, that, contained, triangle, touches, tangent, three, sides, center, . Incircle redirects here For incircles of non triangle polygons see Tangential quadrilateral and Tangential polygon In geometry the incircle or inscribed circle of a triangle is the largest circle that can be contained in the triangle it touches is tangent to the three sides The center of the incircle is a triangle center called the triangle s incenter 1 Incircle and excircles of a triangle Extended sides of triangle ABC Incircle incenter at I Excircles excenters at JA JB JC Internal angle bisectors External angle bisectors forming the excentral triangle An excircle or escribed circle 2 of the triangle is a circle lying outside the triangle tangent to one of its sides and tangent to the extensions of the other two Every triangle has three distinct excircles each tangent to one of the triangle s sides 3 The center of the incircle called the incenter can be found as the intersection of the three internal angle bisectors 3 4 The center of an excircle is the intersection of the internal bisector of one angle at vertex A for example and the external bisectors of the other two The center of this excircle is called the excenter relative to the vertex A or the excenter of A 3 Because the internal bisector of an angle is perpendicular to its external bisector it follows that the center of the incircle together with the three excircle centers form an orthocentric system 5 but not all polygons do those that do are tangential polygons See also tangent lines to circles Contents 1 Incircle and incenter 1 1 Incenter 1 1 1 Trilinear coordinates 1 1 2 Barycentric coordinates 1 1 3 Cartesian coordinates 1 1 4 Radius 1 1 5 Distances to the vertices 1 1 6 Other properties 1 2 Incircle and its radius properties 1 2 1 Distances between vertex and nearest touchpoints 1 2 2 Other properties 1 2 3 Relation to area of the triangle 1 3 Gergonne triangle and point 2 Excircles and excenters 2 1 Trilinear coordinates of excenters 2 2 Exradii 2 2 1 Derivation of exradii formula 2 2 2 Other properties 2 3 Other excircle properties 2 4 Nagel triangle and Nagel point 3 Related constructions 3 1 Nine point circle and Feuerbach point 3 2 Incentral and excentral triangles 4 Equations for four circles 5 Euler s theorem 6 Generalization to other polygons 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External links 10 1 InteractiveIncircle and incenter editSee also Incenter Suppose A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp has an incircle with radius r displaystyle r nbsp and center I displaystyle I nbsp Let a displaystyle a nbsp be the length of B C displaystyle overline BC nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp the length of A C displaystyle overline AC nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp the length of A B displaystyle overline AB nbsp Also let T A displaystyle T A nbsp T B displaystyle T B nbsp and T C displaystyle T C nbsp be the touchpoints where the incircle touches B C displaystyle overline BC nbsp A C displaystyle overline AC nbsp and A B displaystyle overline AB nbsp Incenter edit The incenter is the point where the internal angle bisectors of A B C B C A and B A C displaystyle angle ABC angle BCA text and angle BAC nbsp meet The distance from vertex A displaystyle A nbsp to the incenter I displaystyle I nbsp is citation needed d A I c sin B 2 cos C 2 b sin C 2 cos B 2 displaystyle d A I c frac sin frac B 2 cos frac C 2 b frac sin frac C 2 cos frac B 2 nbsp Trilinear coordinates edit The trilinear coordinates for a point in the triangle is the ratio of all the distances to the triangle sides Because the incenter is the same distance from all sides of the triangle the trilinear coordinates for the incenter are 6 1 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 1 nbsp Barycentric coordinates edit The barycentric coordinates for a point in a triangle give weights such that the point is the weighted average of the triangle vertex positions Barycentric coordinates for the incenter are given by a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp are the lengths of the sides of the triangle or equivalently using the law of sines bysin A sin B sin C displaystyle sin A sin B sin C nbsp where A displaystyle A nbsp B displaystyle B nbsp and C displaystyle C nbsp are the angles at the three vertices Cartesian coordinates edit The Cartesian coordinates of the incenter are a weighted average of the coordinates of the three vertices using the side lengths of the triangle relative to the perimeter that is using the barycentric coordinates given above normalized to sum to unity as weights The weights are positive so the incenter lies inside the triangle as stated above If the three vertices are located at x a y a displaystyle x a y a nbsp x b y b displaystyle x b y b nbsp and x c y c displaystyle x c y c nbsp and the sides opposite these vertices have corresponding lengths a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp then the incenter is at citation needed a x a b x b c x c a b c a y a b y b c y c a b c a x a y a b x b y b c x c y c a b c displaystyle left frac ax a bx b cx c a b c frac ay a by b cy c a b c right frac a left x a y a right b left x b y b right c left x c y c right a b c nbsp Radius edit The inradius r displaystyle r nbsp of the incircle in a triangle with sides of length a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp c displaystyle c nbsp is given by 7 r s a s b s c s displaystyle r sqrt frac s a s b s c s nbsp where s 1 2 a b c displaystyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c nbsp is the semiperimeter The tangency points of the incircle divide the sides into segments of lengths s a displaystyle s a nbsp s b displaystyle s b nbsp and s c displaystyle s c nbsp 8 See Heron s formula Distances to the vertices edit Denoting the incenter of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp as I displaystyle I nbsp the distances from the incenter to the vertices combined with the lengths of the triangle sides obey the equation 9 I A I A C A A B I B I B A B B C I C I C B C C A 1 displaystyle frac overline IA cdot overline IA overline CA cdot overline AB frac overline IB cdot overline IB overline AB cdot overline BC frac overline IC cdot overline IC overline BC cdot overline CA 1 nbsp Additionally 10 I A I B I C 4 R r 2 displaystyle overline IA cdot overline IB cdot overline IC 4Rr 2 nbsp where R displaystyle R nbsp and r displaystyle r nbsp are the triangle s circumradius and inradius respectively Other properties edit The collection of triangle centers may be given the structure of a group under coordinate wise multiplication of trilinear coordinates in this group the incenter forms the identity element 6 Incircle and its radius properties edit Distances between vertex and nearest touchpoints edit The distances from a vertex to the two nearest touchpoints are equal for example 11 d A T B d A T C 1 2 b c a s a displaystyle d left A T B right d left A T C right tfrac 1 2 b c a s a nbsp Other properties edit If the altitudes from sides of lengths a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp are h a displaystyle h a nbsp h b displaystyle h b nbsp and h c displaystyle h c nbsp then the inradius r displaystyle r nbsp is one third of the harmonic mean of these altitudes that is 12 r 1 1 h a 1 h b 1 h c displaystyle r frac 1 dfrac 1 h a dfrac 1 h b dfrac 1 h c nbsp The product of the incircle radius r displaystyle r nbsp and the circumcircle radius R displaystyle R nbsp of a triangle with sides a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp is 13 r R a b c 2 a b c displaystyle rR frac abc 2 a b c nbsp Some relations among the sides incircle radius and circumcircle radius are 14 a b b c c a s 2 4 R r r a 2 b 2 c 2 2 s 2 2 4 R r r displaystyle begin aligned ab bc ca amp s 2 4R r r a 2 b 2 c 2 amp 2s 2 2 4R r r end aligned nbsp Any line through a triangle that splits both the triangle s area and its perimeter in half goes through the triangle s incenter the center of its incircle There are either one two or three of these for any given triangle 15 Denoting the center of the incircle of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp as I displaystyle I nbsp we have 16 I A I A C A A B I B I B A B B C I C I C B C C A 1 displaystyle frac overline IA cdot overline IA overline CA cdot overline AB frac overline IB cdot overline IB overline AB cdot overline BC frac overline IC cdot overline IC overline BC cdot overline CA 1 nbsp and 17 121 84 I A I B I C 4 R r 2 displaystyle overline IA cdot overline IB cdot overline IC 4Rr 2 nbsp The incircle radius is no greater than one ninth the sum of the altitudes 18 289 The squared distance from the incenter I displaystyle I nbsp to the circumcenter O displaystyle O nbsp is given by 19 232 O I 2 R R 2 r a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c 1 displaystyle overline OI 2 R R 2r frac a b c a b c left frac a b c a b c a b c a b c 1 right nbsp and the distance from the incenter to the center N displaystyle N nbsp of the nine point circle is 19 232 I N 1 2 R 2 r lt 1 2 R displaystyle overline IN tfrac 1 2 R 2r lt tfrac 1 2 R nbsp The incenter lies in the medial triangle whose vertices are the midpoints of the sides 19 233 Lemma 1 Relation to area of the triangle edit Inradius redirects here For the three dimensional equivalent see Inscribed sphere The radius of the incircle is related to the area of the triangle 20 The ratio of the area of the incircle to the area of the triangle is less than or equal to p 3 3 displaystyle pi big 3 sqrt 3 nbsp with equality holding only for equilateral triangles 21 Suppose A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp has an incircle with radius r displaystyle r nbsp and center I displaystyle I nbsp Let a displaystyle a nbsp be the length of B C displaystyle overline BC nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp the length of A C displaystyle overline AC nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp the length of A B displaystyle overline AB nbsp Now the incircle is tangent to A B displaystyle overline AB nbsp at some point T C displaystyle T C nbsp and so A T C I displaystyle angle AT C I nbsp is right Thus the radius T C I displaystyle T C I nbsp is an altitude of I A B displaystyle triangle IAB nbsp Therefore I A B displaystyle triangle IAB nbsp has base length c displaystyle c nbsp and height r displaystyle r nbsp and so has area 1 2 c r displaystyle tfrac 1 2 cr nbsp Similarly I A C displaystyle triangle IAC nbsp has area 1 2 b r displaystyle tfrac 1 2 br nbsp and I B C displaystyle triangle IBC nbsp has area 1 2 a r displaystyle tfrac 1 2 ar nbsp Since these three triangles decompose A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp we see that the area D of A B C displaystyle Delta text of triangle ABC nbsp is D 1 2 a b c r s r displaystyle Delta tfrac 1 2 a b c r sr nbsp and r D s displaystyle r frac Delta s nbsp where D displaystyle Delta nbsp is the area of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp and s 1 2 a b c displaystyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c nbsp is its semiperimeter For an alternative formula consider I T C A displaystyle triangle IT C A nbsp This is a right angled triangle with one side equal to r displaystyle r nbsp and the other side equal to r cot A 2 displaystyle r cot tfrac A 2 nbsp The same is true for I B A displaystyle triangle IB A nbsp The large triangle is composed of six such triangles and the total area is citation needed D r 2 cot A 2 cot B 2 cot C 2 displaystyle Delta r 2 left cot tfrac A 2 cot tfrac B 2 cot tfrac C 2 right nbsp Gergonne triangle and point edit nbsp Triangle ABC Incircle incenter at I Contact triangle TATBTC Lines between opposite vertices of ABC and TATBTC concur at Gergonne point Ge The Gergonne triangle of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp is defined by the three touchpoints of the incircle on the three sides The touchpoint opposite A displaystyle A nbsp is denoted T A displaystyle T A nbsp etc This Gergonne triangle T A T B T C displaystyle triangle T A T B T C nbsp is also known as the contact triangle or intouch triangle of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp Its area isK T K 2 r 2 s a b c displaystyle K T K frac 2r 2 s abc nbsp where K displaystyle K nbsp r displaystyle r nbsp and s displaystyle s nbsp are the area radius of the incircle and semiperimeter of the original triangle and a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp are the side lengths of the original triangle This is the same area as that of the extouch triangle 22 The three lines A T A displaystyle AT A nbsp B T B displaystyle BT B nbsp and C T C displaystyle CT C nbsp intersect in a single point called the Gergonne point denoted as G e displaystyle G e nbsp or triangle center X7 The Gergonne point lies in the open orthocentroidal disk punctured at its own center and can be any point therein 23 The Gergonne point of a triangle has a number of properties including that it is the symmedian point of the Gergonne triangle 24 Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the intouch triangle are given by citation needed T A 0 sec 2 B 2 sec 2 C 2 T B sec 2 A 2 0 sec 2 C 2 T C sec 2 A 2 sec 2 B 2 0 displaystyle begin array ccccccc T A amp amp 0 amp amp sec 2 frac B 2 amp amp sec 2 frac C 2 2pt T B amp amp sec 2 frac A 2 amp amp 0 amp amp sec 2 frac C 2 2pt T C amp amp sec 2 frac A 2 amp amp sec 2 frac B 2 amp amp 0 end array nbsp Trilinear coordinates for the Gergonne point are given by citation needed sec 2 A 2 sec 2 B 2 sec 2 C 2 displaystyle sec 2 tfrac A 2 sec 2 tfrac B 2 sec 2 tfrac C 2 nbsp or equivalently by the Law of Sines b c b c a c a c a b a b a b c displaystyle frac bc b c a frac ca c a b frac ab a b c nbsp Excircles and excenters edit nbsp Extended sides of ABC Incircle incenter at I Excircles excenters at JA JB JC Internal angle bisectors External angle bisectors forming the excentral triangle An excircle or escribed circle 2 of the triangle is a circle lying outside the triangle tangent to one of its sides and tangent to the extensions of the other two Every triangle has three distinct excircles each tangent to one of the triangle s sides 3 The center of an excircle is the intersection of the internal bisector of one angle at vertex A displaystyle A nbsp for example and the external bisectors of the other two The center of this excircle is called the excenter relative to the vertex A displaystyle A nbsp or the excenter of A displaystyle A nbsp 3 Because the internal bisector of an angle is perpendicular to its external bisector it follows that the center of the incircle together with the three excircle centers form an orthocentric system 5 Trilinear coordinates of excenters edit While the incenter of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp has trilinear coordinates 1 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 1 nbsp the excenters have trilinears citation needed J A 1 1 1 J B 1 1 1 J C 1 1 1 displaystyle begin array rrcrcr J A amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 J B amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 J C amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 end array nbsp Exradii edit The radii of the excircles are called the exradii The exradius of the excircle opposite A displaystyle A nbsp so touching B C displaystyle BC nbsp centered at J A displaystyle J A nbsp is 25 26 r a r s s a s s b s c s a displaystyle r a frac rs s a sqrt frac s s b s c s a nbsp where s 1 2 a b c displaystyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c nbsp See Heron s formula Derivation of exradii formula edit Source 25 Let the excircle at side A B displaystyle AB nbsp touch at side A C displaystyle AC nbsp extended at G displaystyle G nbsp and let this excircle s radius be r c displaystyle r c nbsp and its center be J c displaystyle J c nbsp Then J c G displaystyle J c G nbsp is an altitude of A C J c displaystyle triangle ACJ c nbsp so A C J c displaystyle triangle ACJ c nbsp has area 1 2 b r c displaystyle tfrac 1 2 br c nbsp By a similar argument B C J c displaystyle triangle BCJ c nbsp has area 1 2 a r c displaystyle tfrac 1 2 ar c nbsp and A B J c displaystyle triangle ABJ c nbsp has area 1 2 c r c displaystyle tfrac 1 2 cr c nbsp Thus the area D displaystyle Delta nbsp of triangle A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp isD 1 2 a b c r c s c r c displaystyle Delta tfrac 1 2 a b c r c s c r c nbsp So by symmetry denoting r displaystyle r nbsp as the radius of the incircle D s r s a r a s b r b s c r c displaystyle Delta sr s a r a s b r b s c r c nbsp By the Law of Cosines we havecos A b 2 c 2 a 2 2 b c displaystyle cos A frac b 2 c 2 a 2 2bc nbsp Combining this with the identity sin 2 A cos 2 A 1 displaystyle sin 2 A cos 2 A 1 nbsp we havesin A a 4 b 4 c 4 2 a 2 b 2 2 b 2 c 2 2 a 2 c 2 2 b c displaystyle sin A frac sqrt a 4 b 4 c 4 2a 2 b 2 2b 2 c 2 2a 2 c 2 2bc nbsp But D 1 2 b c sin A displaystyle Delta tfrac 1 2 bc sin A nbsp and soD 1 4 a 4 b 4 c 4 2 a 2 b 2 2 b 2 c 2 2 a 2 c 2 1 4 a b c a b c a b c a b c s s a s b s c displaystyle begin aligned Delta amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a 4 b 4 c 4 2a 2 b 2 2b 2 c 2 2a 2 c 2 5mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a b c a b c a b c a b c 5mu amp sqrt s s a s b s c end aligned nbsp which is Heron s formula Combining this with s r D displaystyle sr Delta nbsp we haver 2 D 2 s 2 s a s b s c s displaystyle r 2 frac Delta 2 s 2 frac s a s b s c s nbsp Similarly s a r a D displaystyle s a r a Delta nbsp givesr a 2 s s b s c s a r a s s b s c s a displaystyle begin aligned amp r a 2 frac s s b s c s a 4pt amp implies r a sqrt frac s s b s c s a end aligned nbsp Other properties edit From the formulas above one can see that the excircles are always larger than the incircle and that the largest excircle is the one tangent to the longest side and the smallest excircle is tangent to the shortest side Further combining these formulas yields 27 D r r a r b r c displaystyle Delta sqrt rr a r b r c nbsp Other excircle properties edit The circular hull of the excircles is internally tangent to each of the excircles and is thus an Apollonius circle 28 The radius of this Apollonius circle is r 2 s 2 4 r displaystyle tfrac r 2 s 2 4r nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp is the incircle radius and s displaystyle s nbsp is the semiperimeter of the triangle 29 The following relations hold among the inradius r displaystyle r nbsp the circumradius R displaystyle R nbsp the semiperimeter s displaystyle s nbsp and the excircle radii r a displaystyle r a nbsp r b displaystyle r b nbsp r c displaystyle r c nbsp 14 r a r b r c 4 R r r a r b r b r c r c r a s 2 r a 2 r b 2 r c 2 4 R r 2 2 s 2 displaystyle begin aligned r a r b r c amp 4R r r a r b r b r c r c r a amp s 2 r a 2 r b 2 r c 2 amp left 4R r right 2 2s 2 end aligned nbsp The circle through the centers of the three excircles has radius 2 R displaystyle 2R nbsp 14 If H displaystyle H nbsp is the orthocenter of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp then 14 r a r b r c r A H B H C H 2 R r a 2 r b 2 r c 2 r 2 A H 2 B H 2 C H 2 2 R 2 displaystyle begin aligned r a r b r c r amp overline AH overline BH overline CH 2R r a 2 r b 2 r c 2 r 2 amp overline AH 2 overline BH 2 overline CH 2 2R 2 end aligned nbsp Nagel triangle and Nagel point edit Main article Extouch triangle nbsp Extended sides of triangle ABC Excircles of ABC tangent at TA TB TC Nagel Extouch triangle TATBTC Splitters lines connecting opposite vertices of ABC and TATBTC concur at Nagel point N The Nagel triangle or extouch triangle of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp is denoted by the vertices T A displaystyle T A nbsp T B displaystyle T B nbsp and T C displaystyle T C nbsp that are the three points where the excircles touch the reference A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp and where T A displaystyle T A nbsp is opposite of A displaystyle A nbsp etc This T A T B T C displaystyle triangle T A T B T C nbsp is also known as the extouch triangle of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp The circumcircle of the extouch T A T B T C displaystyle triangle T A T B T C nbsp is called the Mandart circle citation needed The three line segments A T A displaystyle overline AT A nbsp B T B displaystyle overline BT B nbsp and C T C displaystyle overline CT C nbsp are called the splitters of the triangle they each bisect the perimeter of the triangle citation needed A B B T A A C C T A 1 2 A B B C A C displaystyle overline AB overline BT A overline AC overline CT A frac 1 2 left overline AB overline BC overline AC right nbsp The splitters intersect in a single point the triangle s Nagel point N a displaystyle N a nbsp or triangle center X8 Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the extouch triangle are given by citation needed T A 0 csc 2 B 2 csc 2 C 2 T B csc 2 A 2 0 csc 2 C 2 T C csc 2 A 2 csc 2 B 2 0 displaystyle begin array ccccccc T A amp amp 0 amp amp csc 2 frac B 2 amp amp csc 2 frac C 2 2pt T B amp amp csc 2 frac A 2 amp amp 0 amp amp csc 2 frac C 2 2pt T C amp amp csc 2 frac A 2 amp amp csc 2 frac B 2 amp amp 0 end array nbsp Trilinear coordinates for the Nagel point are given by citation needed csc 2 A 2 csc 2 B 2 csc 2 C 2 displaystyle csc 2 tfrac A 2 csc 2 tfrac B 2 csc 2 tfrac C 2 nbsp or equivalently by the Law of Sines b c a a c a b b a b c c displaystyle frac b c a a frac c a b b frac a b c c nbsp The Nagel point is the isotomic conjugate of the Gergonne point citation needed Related constructions editNine point circle and Feuerbach point edit Main article Nine point circle nbsp The nine point circle is tangent to the incircle and excircles In geometry the nine point circle is a circle that can be constructed for any given triangle It is so named because it passes through nine significant concyclic points defined from the triangle These nine points are 30 31 The midpoint of each side of the triangle The foot of each altitude The midpoint of the line segment from each vertex of the triangle to the orthocenter where the three altitudes meet these line segments lie on their respective altitudes In 1822 Karl Feuerbach discovered that any triangle s nine point circle is externally tangent to that triangle s three excircles and internally tangent to its incircle this result is known as Feuerbach s theorem He proved that 32 the circle which passes through the feet of the altitudes of a triangle is tangent to all four circles which in turn are tangent to the three sides of the triangle Feuerbach 1822 The triangle center at which the incircle and the nine point circle touch is called the Feuerbach point Incentral and excentral triangles edit The points of intersection of the interior angle bisectors of A B C displaystyle triangle ABC nbsp with the segments B C displaystyle BC nbsp C A displaystyle CA nbsp and A B displaystyle AB nbsp are the vertices of the incentral triangle Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the incentral triangle A B C displaystyle triangle A B C nbsp are given by citation needed A 0 1 1 B 1 0 1 C 1 1 0 displaystyle begin array ccccccc A amp amp 0 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 2pt B amp amp 1 amp amp 0 amp amp 1 2pt C amp amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 0 end array nbsp The excentral triangle of a reference triangle has vertices at the centers of the reference triangle s excircles Its sides are on the external angle bisectors of the reference triangle see figure at top of page Trilinear coordinates for the vertices of the excentral triangle A B C displaystyle triangle A B C nbsp are given by citation needed A 1 1 1 B 1 1 1 C 1 1 1 displaystyle begin array ccrcrcr A amp amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 2pt B amp amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 2pt C amp amp 1 amp amp 1 amp amp 1 end array nbsp Equations for four circles editLet x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp be a variable point in trilinear coordinates and let u cos 2 A 2 displaystyle u cos 2 left A 2 right nbsp v cos 2 B 2 displaystyle v cos 2 left B 2 right nbsp w cos 2 C 2 displaystyle w cos 2 left C 2 right nbsp The four circles described above are given equivalently by either of the two given equations 33 210 215 Incircle u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2 v w y z 2 w u z x 2 u v x y 0 x cos A 2 y t cos B 2 z cos C 2 0 displaystyle begin aligned u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2vwyz 2wuzx 2uvxy amp 0 4pt textstyle pm sqrt x cos tfrac A 2 pm sqrt y vphantom t cos tfrac B 2 pm sqrt z cos tfrac C 2 amp 0 end aligned nbsp A displaystyle A nbsp excircle u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2 v w y z 2 w u z x 2 u v x y 0 x cos A 2 y t cos B 2 z cos C 2 0 displaystyle begin aligned u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2vwyz 2wuzx 2uvxy amp 0 4pt textstyle pm sqrt x cos tfrac A 2 pm sqrt y vphantom t cos tfrac B 2 pm sqrt z cos tfrac C 2 amp 0 end aligned nbsp B displaystyle B nbsp excircle u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2 v w y z 2 w u z x 2 u v x y 0 x cos A 2 y t cos B 2 z cos C 2 0 displaystyle begin aligned u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2vwyz 2wuzx 2uvxy amp 0 4pt textstyle pm sqrt x cos tfrac A 2 pm sqrt y vphantom t cos tfrac B 2 pm sqrt z cos tfrac C 2 amp 0 end aligned nbsp C displaystyle C nbsp excircle u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2 v w y z 2 w u z x 2 u v x y 0 x cos A 2 y t cos B 2 z cos C 2 0 displaystyle begin aligned u 2 x 2 v 2 y 2 w 2 z 2 2vwyz 2wuzx 2uvxy amp 0 4pt textstyle pm sqrt x cos tfrac A 2 pm sqrt y vphantom t cos tfrac B 2 pm sqrt z cos tfrac C 2 amp 0 end aligned nbsp Euler s theorem editEuler s theorem states that in a triangle R r 2 d 2 r 2 displaystyle R r 2 d 2 r 2 nbsp where R displaystyle R nbsp and r displaystyle r nbsp are the circumradius and inradius respectively and d displaystyle d nbsp is the distance between the circumcenter and the incenter For excircles the equation is similar R r ex 2 d ex 2 r ex 2 displaystyle left R r text ex right 2 d text ex 2 r text ex 2 nbsp where r ex displaystyle r text ex nbsp is the radius of one of the excircles and d ex displaystyle d text ex nbsp is the distance between the circumcenter and that excircle s center 34 35 36 Generalization to other polygons editSome but not all quadrilaterals have an incircle These are called tangential quadrilaterals Among their many properties perhaps the most important is that their two pairs of opposite sides have equal sums This is called the Pitot theorem 37 More generally a polygon with any number of sides that has an inscribed circle that is one that is tangent to each side is called a tangential polygon citation needed See also editCircumgon Geometric figure which circumscribes a circle Circumcircle Circle that passes through the vertices of a triangle Ex tangential quadrilateral Convex 4 sided polygon whose sidelines are all tangent to an outside circle Harcourt s theorem Area of a triangle from its sides and vertex distances to any line tangent to its incircle Circumconic and inconic Conic section that passes through the vertices of a triangle or is tangent to its sides Inscribed sphere Sphere tangent to every face of a polyhedron Power of a point Relative distance of a point from a circle Steiner inellipse Unique ellipse tangent to all 3 midpoints of a given triangle s sides Tangential quadrilateral Polygon whose four sides all touch a circle Triangle conic Trillium theorem A statement about properties of inscribed and circumscribed circlesNotes edit Kay 1969 p 140 a b Altshiller Court 1925 p 74 a b c d e Altshiller Court 1925 p 73 Kay 1969 p 117 a b Johnson 1929 p 182 a b Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers Archived 2012 04 19 at the Wayback Machine accessed 2014 10 28 Kay 1969 p 201 Chu Thomas The Pentagon Spring 2005 p 45 problem 584 Allaire Patricia R Zhou Junmin Yao Haishen March 2012 Proving a nineteenth century ellipse identity Mathematical Gazette 96 161 165 doi 10 1017 S0025557200004277 S2CID 124176398 Altshiller Court Nathan 1980 College Geometry Dover Publications 84 p 121 Mathematical Gazette July 2003 323 324 Kay 1969 p 203 Johnson 1929 p 189 298 d a b c d Bell Amy Hansen s right triangle theorem its converse and a generalization Forum Geometricorum 6 2006 335 342 Kodokostas Dimitrios Triangle Equalizers Mathematics Magazine 83 April 2010 pp 141 146 Allaire Patricia R Zhou Junmin and Yao Haishen Proving a nineteenth century ellipse identity Mathematical Gazette 96 March 2012 161 165 Altshiller Court Nathan College Geometry Dover Publications 1980 Posamentier Alfred S and Lehmann Ingmar The Secrets of Triangles Prometheus Books 2012 a b c Franzsen William N 2011 The distance from the incenter to the Euler line PDF Forum Geometricorum 11 231 236 MR 2877263 Coxeter H S M Introduction to Geometry2nd ed Wiley 1961 Minda D and Phelps S Triangles ellipses and cubic polynomials American Mathematical Monthly 115 October 2008 679 689 Theorem 4 1 Weisstein Eric W Contact Triangle From MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource http mathworld wolfram com ContactTriangle html Christopher J Bradley and Geoff C Smith The locations of triangle centers Forum Geometricorum 6 2006 57 70 http forumgeom fau edu FG2006volume6 FG200607index html Dekov Deko 2009 Computer generated Mathematics The Gergonne Point PDF Journal of Computer generated Euclidean Geometry 1 1 14 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 05 a b Altshiller Court 1925 p 79 Kay 1969 p 202 Baker Marcus A collection of formulae for the area of a plane triangle Annals of Mathematics part 1 in vol 1 6 January 1885 134 138 See also part 2 in vol 2 1 September 1885 11 18 Grinberg Darij and Yiu Paul The Apollonius Circle as a Tucker Circle Forum Geometricorum 2 2002 pp 175 182 Stevanovi c Milorad R The Apollonius circle and related triangle centers Forum Geometricorum 3 2003 187 195 Altshiller Court 1925 pp 103 110 Kay 1969 pp 18 245 Feuerbach Karl Wilhelm Buzengeiger Carl Heribert Ignatz 1822 Eigenschaften einiger merkwurdigen Punkte des geradlinigen Dreiecks und mehrerer durch sie bestimmten Linien und Figuren Eine analytisch trigonometrische Abhandlung Monograph ed Nurnberg Wiessner Whitworth William Allen Trilinear Coordinates and Other Methods of Modern Analytical Geometry of Two Dimensions Forgotten Books 2012 orig Deighton Bell and Co 1866 http www forgottenbooks com search q Trilinear coordinates amp t books Nelson Roger Euler s triangle inequality via proof without words Mathematics Magazine 81 1 February 2008 58 61 Johnson 1929 p 187 Emelyanov Lev and Emelyanova Tatiana Euler s formula and Poncelet s porism Forum Geometricorum 1 2001 pp 137 140 Josefsson 2011 See in particular pp 65 66 References editAltshiller Court Nathan 1925 College Geometry An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle 2nd ed New York Barnes amp Noble LCCN 52013504 Johnson Roger A 1929 X Inscribed and Escribed Circles Modern Geometry Houghton Mifflin pp 182 194 Josefsson Martin 2011 More characterizations of tangential quadrilaterals PDF Forum Geometricorum 11 65 82 MR 2877281 Kay David C 1969 College Geometry New York Holt Rinehart and Winston LCCN 69012075 Kimberling Clark 1998 Triangle Centers and Central Triangles Congressus Numerantium 129 i xxv 1 295 Kiss Sandor 2006 The Orthic of Intouch and Intouch of Orthic Triangles Forum Geometricorum 6 171 177 External links editDerivation of formula for radius of incircle of a triangle Weisstein Eric W Incircle MathWorld Interactive edit Triangle incenter Triangle incircle Incircle of a regular polygon With interactive animations Constructing a triangle s incenter incircle with compass and straightedge An interactive animated demonstration Equal Incircles Theorem at cut the knot Five Incircles Theorem at cut the knot Pairs of Incircles in a Quadrilateral at cut the knot An interactive Java applet for the incenter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Incircle and excircles amp oldid 1220841535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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