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Excircles and Dozens of Points.: Presented by V. Filimonov and A. Zaslavsky

This document summarizes research on excircles and incircles of triangles and their relationships. It introduces various points related to these circles and proves properties about them. The key points introduced include: 1) Touch points of the circles on the triangle sides and lines between them, called the "First Dozen". 2) Intersection points of lines between certain touch points, called the "Second Dozen". 3) Intersection points of lines from the circles to the triangle altitudes, called the "Third Dozen". 4) Intersection points within the triangle related to both touch points and sides, called the "Fourth Dozen". Properties proved include concurrency of certain points,
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views

Excircles and Dozens of Points.: Presented by V. Filimonov and A. Zaslavsky

This document summarizes research on excircles and incircles of triangles and their relationships. It introduces various points related to these circles and proves properties about them. The key points introduced include: 1) Touch points of the circles on the triangle sides and lines between them, called the "First Dozen". 2) Intersection points of lines between certain touch points, called the "Second Dozen". 3) Intersection points of lines from the circles to the triangle altitudes, called the "Third Dozen". 4) Intersection points within the triangle related to both touch points and sides, called the "Fourth Dozen". Properties proved include concurrency of certain points,
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Excircles and Dozens of Points.

(Presented

by V. Filimonov and A. Zaslavsky.

On the Origin of this Series of Problems.


The work on this series started from the problem posed by D. Tereshin.

Problem (D. Tereshin). Consider triangle ABC and its excircles: one of them touches the side AC at K and touches the lines AB and BC at L and M , the other touches the side AB at P and touches the lines AC and BC at Q and R. Prove that the intersection point X of the lines LM and QR lies on the altitude (passing through A) of the triangle ABC .
At once the geometrical solution was not found, only calculations work. Some observations made this problem more exciting. It appears that the intersection point Y of lines KM and P R lies on the altitude of triangle ABC , and the length of the segments AY and AX equal to the radii of incircle and excircle touching the side BC . Some other results were obtained, and some connections with known problems from olympiads were established. In search for the geometrical explanation of these results we tried to consider in details the touch points of the sides with incircle and excircles, and the lines joining these touch points. The incircle and the excircles have some di erent properties (for example, the incircle is smaller than any of the excircles, the incircle lies inside the triangle while the excircle lies outside the triangle). Nevertheless, these four circles have deep common properties: each of them touches the three sidelines of the triangle, the center of each circle is the intersection of three angle bisectors (either internal or external). So as a rule, if one of the four circles has some property, then the others have an analogous property. That is why these four circles in some sense enjoy equal rights with respect to the original triangle. To understand some important geometrical results we need to consider all the four circles simultaneously. Thus we introduce some non-regular but symmetrical notation (see below). The sections A, B, C of the project were made by the author of the text jointly with I. Bogdanov, the section D was added by A. Zaslavsky. Also A. Akopyan, D. Prokopenko, and V. Protassov had made many useful notes and additions. P. Kozhevnikov

Excircles and Dozens of Points.

Notation.
In a xed non-equilateral triangle ABC let us denote: R, p | the radius of the circumcircle and semiperimeter; a, b, c | lengths of BC , CA, AB ; A , B , C | midpoints of BC , CA, AB ; AHa , BHb , CHc | altitudes, H | orthocenter of triangle ABC ; | circumcircle, O | circumcenter; 0 | incircle, I0 | incenter; 1 , 2 , 3 | excircles (touching segments BC , CA, AB , respectively), I1 , I2 , I3 | centers of the excircles, ri | radii of i ; I0 , I1 , I2 , I3 | centers of incircle and excircles of triangle A B C . The notation has the following symmetry: Note that 6 lines Ii Ij (i = j ) are internal and external bisectors of triangle ABC . Therefore the quadruple I0 , I1 , I2 , I3 is orthocentric, and ABC is the orthotriangle (that is the triangle having feet of altitudes as vertices) for each of triangles I0 I1 I2 , I1 I2 I3 , I2 I3 I0 , I3 I0 I1 ). To each of the points A, B, C we put into correspondence a partition of 4-element set {0, 1, 2, 3} into two 2-element subsets: A = I0 I1 I2 I3 , B = I0 I2 I1 I3 , C = I0 I3 I1 I2 . Also see the further notation

Series : The First Dozen: Touch Points


Let Ai , Bi , Ci (i = 0, 1, 2, 3) be touch points of i and lines BC , CA, AB , respectively (see 12 red points in Fig. A). Prove the following statements. A1. A0 A1 (and also A2 and A3 ) are symmetric with respect to A , moreover, A0 A3 = A1 A2 = c,
A0 A2 = A1 A3 = b, A A0 = A A1 = |b c| b+c , A A2 = A A3 = . (Similarly there is symmetry 2 2

with respect to B and C .)

A2. ) AAi , BBi , CCi are concurrent. ) AA1 , BB2 , CC3 are concurrent. (Similarly, triples of lines AA0 , BB3 , CC2 ; AA2 , BB1 , CC0 ; AA3 , BB0 , CC1 are either concurrent or parallel.) A3. Radical axis of pairs i and j are internal and external bisectors of triangle A B C . (Find the radical centers of triples of circles 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 .) A4. In the set of circles touching 1 , 2 , 3 there exist three circles passing through I0 . (Formulate and prove the similar statement for the other triples of circles.) A5. AA1 I0 A (similarly AA0 I1 A , AA2 I3 A , AA3 I2 A , etc.). A6. I0 A1 , I1 A0 , I2 A3 , I3 A2 are concurrent. Determine the intersection point of these lines.

Series B: The Second Dozen: "Foci"


Let us denote B01 = B10 = A0 B0 A1 B1 , B23 = B32 = A2 B2 A3 B3 . (Here A0 B0 A1 B1 is B01 , and not A01 , since A corresponds to the partition of {0, 1, 2, 3} into pairs 0, 1 and 2, 3.) Similarly de ne all 12 points: Aij with i {0, 1}, j {2, 3} (we put Aij = Aji ); Bij with i {0, 2}, j {1, 3}; Cij with i {0, 3}, j {1, 2}. (See 12 violet points in Fig. B1, B2.) Prove the following statements. B0. B2 B23 B3 = 90 (similarly for the other angles). B1. B23 , C23 , A2 , A3 are concyclic. Find the center of the circle passing through these points. (Similarly, B01 , C01 , A0 , A1 are concyclic, etc., thus red and violet points belong to 6 circles.) B2. Aij lies on the midline B C (similarly, Bij and Cij lie on midlines, thus 12 violet points lie on 3 lines A B , B C , C A ). B3. A13 (the same for A02 , B01 , B23 ) lie on the circle with diameter AB , (moreover, A02 B01 A13 B23 is a rectangle.) (Thus 12 violet points lie on 3 circles with diameters BC , CA, AB ). B4. Find the lengths A02 A03 , etc., in terms of a, b, c. B5. Aij lies on Ii Ij , moreover, Aij is the projection of A to Ii Ij . (thus 12 violet points belong to 6 bisectors of triangle ABC ). B6. A02 and C02 are foci of 0 and 2 (Foci means that A02 and C02 is a pair of points inverse to each other with respect to each of two circles). (Thus 12 violet points are partitioned into 6 pairs of foci; in particular, from that it follows that each of i contains exactly 3 violet points). B7. Determine the radical centers of triples of circles from Problem B1 having distinct centers. B8. Six points A03 , A02 , C02 , C23 , B23 , B03 lie on a circle (also there exist 3 circles constructed in the same manner). Determine the centers of these circles. Find the radii of these circles in terms of a, b, c. B9. A02 and A13 are either the centers of incircle and excircle or the centers of excircles, for the triangle B Ha Hb .

Series C: The Third Dozen: Intersections on the Altitudes


Let A(3) = A0 C0 A1 B1 (Here A0 C0 A1 B1 is A(3) , and not A(2) , since C corresponds to the partition of {0, 1, 2, 3} into pairs 0, 3 and 1, 2, here 3 belongs to the pair containing 0). Similarly, A(2) = A0 B0 A1 C1 , A(0) = A2 B2 A3 C3 , A(1) = A2 C2 A3 B3 ; in the same manner de ne B(i) and C(i) | totally 12 green points in Fig. C. Prove the following statements.

C1. Points A(i) lie on the line AHa (similarly for B(i) and C(i) , thus 12 green points lie on the altitudes of triangle ABC ). C2. The length of AA(i) is equal to ri . C3. A(i) Ai is parallel to one of two bisectors of angle A. C4. Prove that A(1) A1 , B(2) B2 , and C(3) C3 are concurrent. (Similarly, there exist three triples of concurrent lines: A(0) A0 , B(3) B3 , C(2) C2 ; A(3) A3 , B(0) B0 , C(1) C1 ; A(2) A2 , B(1) B1 , C(0) C0 .) 3

C5. Triangles A1 B2 C3 and A(0) B(0) C(0) are symmetric (with respect to a point). De ne the center of symmetry. (Similarly, pair of triangles A0 B3 C2 and A(1) B(1) C(1) , A3 B0 C1 and A(2) B(2) C(2) , A2 B1 C0 and A(3) B(3) C(3) are symmetric.) C6. Triangles A(1) B(2) C(3) , A(0) B(3) C(2) , A(3) B(0) C(1) , A(2) B(1) C(0) Have a common circumcenter (thus green points lie on 4 concentric circles). De ne the common circumcenter. C7. Find AH , BH , CH in terms of radii ri . C8. Find the radius of the circumcircle of triangle A(1) B(2) C(3) in terms of R and r0 . (Similarly, nd the radii of the circles from Problem C6.) C9. Ii A passes through A(i) (similarly, Ii B passes through B(i) , Ii C passes through C(i) ). C10. Let la be a line passing through A and parallel to BC . M = A0 C0 la , N = A0 B0 la . Prove that A(0) is the circumcircle of the triangle A0 M N . Determine the orthocenter of the triangle A0 M N .

Series D: The Fourth Dozen.


= A B A B , and similarly de ne 12 blue points A , B , C (see Fig. D). (The description Let C0 0 0 1 2 i i i of these points is as follows: Take one of the circles, for example 0 . Take its two touch points, say A0 , B0 . Take the touch points of these sides with two other circles that are symmetric to A0 , B0 with respect to the midpoints of the sides | A1 , B2 . Take the intersection points of the lines joining pairs of these points.) Prove the following statements. D1. The sidelines of triangle A i Bi Ci pass through the vertices of triangle ABC .

D2. A line passing through Ci intersects BC , AC at A , B , respectively. Show that A Bi and B A i intersect at some point C of the line AB . D3. AA , BB , CC have a common point that is isogonally conjugate to some point of the line OIi . D4. The circumcircle of triangle A B C passes through the Feuerbach point Fi . D5. Four blue points denoted by the same letter lie on a sideline of the orthotriangle.
D6. a) Triangles A i Bi Ci and ABC are perspective (i.e. the lines joining corresponding vertises of these triangles are concurrent) b)Try to nd some relations between four centers of perspective.

D7. (The generalization of the problem D4) Let C be a point on line Ha Hb . An arbitrary line passing through C intersects BC , AC at A , B , respectively. Let P be the point of intersection of lines AA and BB , and C be the point of intersection of lines CP and AB . Then the circumcircles of all triangles A B C have the common point. Tasks from series A, B, C marked # and also from series D were given to the paticipants after the intermediate nish.

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