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[[Image:Bicentric kite 001.png|thumb|right|Bicentric [[Kite (geometry)|deltoid]]]]
[[Image:Equilateral triangle bicentric 001.svg|thumb|right|An [[equilateral triangle]]]]
[[Image:Bicentric isosceles trapezoid 001.png|thumb|right|Bicentric [[isosceles trapezoid]]]]
[[Image:Bicentric kite 001.svg|thumb|right|A [[Bicentric quadrilateral|bicentric]] [[Kite (geometry)|kite]]]]
[[Image:Bicentric isosceles trapezoid 001.svg|thumb|right|A bicentric [[isosceles trapezoid]]]]
[[Image:Pentagon 001.svg|thumb|right|[[Regular polygon|A regular]] [[pentagon]]]]


In geometry, a '''bicentric polygon''' is a tangential [[polygon]] (a polygon all of whose sides are tangent to an inner [[incircle]]) which is also [[Cyclic polygon|cyclic]] — that is, [[inscribe]]d in an [[circumcircle|outer circle]] that passes through each vertex of the polygon. All [[triangle]]s and all [[regular polygon]]s are bicentric. On the other hand, a [[rectangle]] with unequal sides is not bicentric, because no circle can be tangent to all four sides.
In geometry, a '''bicentric polygon''' is a tangential [[polygon]] (a polygon all of whose sides are tangent to an inner [[incircle]]) which is also [[Cyclic polygon|cyclic]] — that is, [[inscribe]]d in an [[circumcircle|outer circle]] that passes through each vertex of the polygon. All [[triangle]]s and all [[regular polygon]]s are bicentric. On the other hand, a [[rectangle]] with unequal sides is not bicentric, because no circle can be tangent to all four sides.


==Triangles==
For some regular polygons which can be [[Compass and straightedge constructions|constructed with compass and ruler]], we have the followng formulas for the relation between the common [[Edge (geometry)|edge]] length ''a'', the [[Incircle and excircles of a triangle|incircle ]] radius ''r'', and the radius ''R'' of the [[Incircle and excircles of a triangle|excircle]]:
{{main|Euler's theorem in geometry}}
Every triangle is bicentric.<ref>{{citation|title=The Facts on File Geometry Handbook|first=Catherine A.|last=Gorini|publisher=Infobase Publishing|year=2009|isbn=9780816073894|page=17|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZnkASIOYJWsC&pg=PA17}}.</ref> In a triangle, the radii ''r'' and ''R'' of the [[Incircle and excircles of a triangle|incircle]] and [[circumcircle]] respectively are related by the [[equation]]
:<math>\frac{1}{R-x}+\frac{1}{R+x}=\frac{1}{r}</math>
where ''x'' is the distance between the centers of the circles.<ref name="imo">{{citation|title=International Mathematical Olympiad: 1976-1990|first=István|last=Reiman|publisher=Anthem Press|year=2005|isbn=9781843312000|pages=170–171|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xE_qYoJBpf4C&pg=PA170}}.</ref> This is one version of [[Euler's theorem in geometry|Euler's triangle formula]].

==Bicentric quadrilaterals==
{{main|Bicentric quadrilateral}}
Not all [[quadrilateral]]s are bicentric (having both an incircle and a circumcircle). Given two circles (one within the other) with radii ''R'' and ''r'' where <math>R>r</math>, there exists a convex quadrilateral inscribed in one of them and tangent to the other [[if and only if]] their radii satisfy
:<math>\frac{1}{(R-x)^2}+\frac{1}{(R+x)^2}=\frac{1}{r^2}</math>
where ''x'' is the distance between their centers.<ref name="imo"/><ref>{{citation|title=Subjects for mathematical essays|first=Charles|last=Davison|publisher=Macmillan and co., limited|year=1915|page=98|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Uz0_AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA98}}.</ref> This condition (and analogous conditions for higher order polygons) is known as [[Bicentric quadrilateral#Fuss' theorem|Fuss' theorem]].<ref>{{citation|title=100 Great Problems of Elementary Mathematics: Their History and Solution|first=Heinrich|last=Dörrie|publisher=Courier Dover Publications|year=1965|isbn=9780486613482|page=192|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i4SJwNrYuAUC&pg=PA192}}.</ref>

==Polygons with n > 4==

A complicated general formula is known for any number ''n'' of sides for the relation among the circumradius ''R'', the inradius ''r'', and the distance ''x'' between the circumcenter and the incenter.<ref>Weisstein, Eric W. "Poncelet's Porism." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PonceletsPorism.html</ref> Some of these for specific ''n'' are:

:<math>n=5: \quad r(R-x)=(R+x)\sqrt{(R-r+x)(R-r-x)}+(R+x)\sqrt{2R(R-r-x)} ,</math>
:<math>n=6: \quad 3(R^2-x^2)^4=4r^2(R^2+x^2)(R^2-x^2)^2+16r^4x^2R^2 ,</math>
:<math>n=8: \quad 16p^4q^4(p^2-1)(q^2-1)=(p^2+q^2-p^2q^2)^4 ,</math>

where <math>p=\tfrac{R+x}{r}</math> and <math>q=\tfrac{R-x}{r}.</math>

==Regular polygons==
Every [[regular polygon]] is bicentric.<ref name="imo"/> In a regular polygon, the incircle and the circumcircle are [[concentric]]&mdash;that is, they share a common center, which is also the center of the regular polygon, so the distance between the incenter and circumcenter is always zero. The radius of the inscribed circle is the [[apothem]] (the shortest distance from the center to the boundary of the regular polygon).

For any regular polygon, the relations between the common [[Edge (geometry)|edge]] length ''a'', the radius ''r'' of the [[Incircle and excircles of a triangle|incircle]], and the radius ''R'' of the [[circumcircle]] are:

:<math>R=\frac{a}{2\sin \frac{\pi}{n}}=\frac{r}{\cos \frac{\pi}{n}}.</math>

For some regular polygons which can be [[Compass and straightedge constructions|constructed with compass and ruler]], we have the following [[algebraic expression|algebraic formulas]] for these relations:
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
| <math>n \!\, </math>
| <math>n \!\, </math>
| <math>r \!\, </math>
| <math>R \, \text{and} \, a \!\, </math>
| <math>R \!\, </math>
| <math>r \, \text{and} \, a \!\, </math>
| <math>a \!\, </math>
| <math>r\, \text{and} \, R \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Equilateral triangle|3]]
| [[Equilateral triangle|3]]
| <math> \frac{R}{2} = \frac{a}{6}\sqrt{3} \!\, </math>
| <math> R\sqrt{3}=a \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r = \frac{a}{3}\sqrt{3} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r = \frac{a}{3}\sqrt{3} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r\sqrt{3} = R\sqrt{3} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r= R \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Square (geometry)|4]]
| [[Square (geometry)|4]]
| <math> \frac{R}{2}\sqrt{2} = \frac{a}{2} \!\, </math>
| <math> R\sqrt{2} = a\!\, </math>
| <math> r\sqrt{2} = \frac{a}{2}\sqrt{2} \!\, </math>
| <math> r= \frac{a}{2} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r = R\sqrt{2} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r = R\sqrt{2} \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Pentagon|5]]
| [[Pentagon|5]]
| <math> \frac{R}{4}\left(\sqrt{5}+1\right) = \frac{a}{10}\sqrt{25+10\sqrt{5}} \!\, </math>
| <math> R\sqrt{\frac{5-\sqrt{5}}{2}}=a\!\, </math>
| <math> r\left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) = \frac{a}{10}\sqrt{50+10\sqrt{5}} \!\, </math>
| <math> r\left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) = \frac{a}{10}\sqrt{50+10\sqrt{5}} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r\sqrt{5-2\sqrt{5}} = \frac{R}{2}\sqrt{10-2\sqrt{5}} \!\, </math>
| <math> r(\sqrt{5}-1) =R \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Hexagon|6]]
| [[Hexagon|6]]
| <math> \frac{R}{2}\sqrt{3} = \frac{a}{2}\sqrt{3} \!\, </math>
| <math> R=a \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{3}\sqrt{3} = a \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{3}\sqrt{3} = a \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{3}\sqrt{3} = R \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{3}\sqrt{3} = R \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Octagon|8]]
| [[Octagon|8]]
| <math> \frac{R}{2} \sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} = \frac{a}{2}\left(\sqrt{2}+1\right) \!\, </math>
| <math> R \sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} = a\left(\sqrt{2}+1\right) \!\, </math>
| <math> r \sqrt{4-2\sqrt{2}} = \frac{a}{2}\sqrt{4+2\sqrt{2}} \!\, </math>
| <math> r \sqrt{4-2\sqrt{2}} = \frac{a}{2}\sqrt{4+2\sqrt{2}} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r \left(\sqrt{2}-1\right) = R\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2}} \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r \left(\sqrt{2}-1\right) = R\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2}} \!\, </math>
|-
|-
| [[Decagon|10]]
| [[Decagon|10]]
| <math> \frac{R}{4} \sqrt{10+2\sqrt{5}} = \frac{a}{2}\sqrt{5+2\sqrt{5}} \!\, </math>
| <math> (\sqrt{5}-1)R=2a \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{r}{5} \sqrt{50-10\sqrt{5}} = \frac{a}{2}\left(\sqrt{5}+1\right) \!\, </math>
| <math> 2r\sqrt{25-10\sqrt{5}}=5a \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{5} \sqrt{25-10\sqrt{5}} = \frac{R}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) \!\, </math>
| <math> \frac{2r}{5} \sqrt{25-10\sqrt{5}} = \frac{R}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) \!\, </math>
|}
|}


Thus we have the following decimal approximations:
==See also==


{| class="wikitable"
*[[Bicentric quadrilateral]]
| <math>n \!\, </math>
|
| <math>R/a \!\, </math>
|
| <math>r/a \!\, </math>
|
| <math>R/r \!\, </math>
|-
| <math> 3 \, </math>
|
| <math>0.577 \, </math>
|
| <math>0.289</math>
|
| <math>2.000 \, </math>
|-
| <math> 4 </math>
|
| <math>0.707 \, </math>
|
| <math> 0.500 </math>
|
| <math>1.414 \, </math>
|-
| <math> 5 </math>
|
| <math>0.851 \, </math>
|
| <math> 0.688 </math>
|
| <math>1.236 \, </math>
|-
| <math> 6 </math>
|
| <math>1.000 \, </math>
|
| <math> 0.866 </math>
|
| <math>1.155 \, </math>
|-
| <math> 8 </math>
|
| <math>1.307 \, </math>
|
| <math> 1.207 </math>
|
| <math>1.082 \, </math>
|-
| <math> 10 </math>
|
| <math>1.618 \, </math>
|
| <math> 1.539 </math>
|
| <math>1.051 \, </math>
|}

==Poncelet's porism==
{{main|Poncelet's closure theorem}}
If two circles are the inscribed and circumscribed circles of a particular bicentric ''n''-gon, then the same two circles are the inscribed and circumscribed circles of infinitely many bicentric ''n''-gons. More precisely,
every [[tangent line]] to the inner of the two circles can be extended to a bicentric ''n''-gon by placing vertices on the line at the points where it crosses the outer circle, continuing from each vertex along another tangent line, and continuing in the same way until the resulting [[polygonal chain]] closes up to an ''n''-gon. The fact that it will always do so is implied by [[Poncelet's closure theorem]], which more generally applies for inscribed and circumscribed [[conic]]s.<ref>{{citation|title=Poncelet's Theorem|first=Leopold|last=Flatto|publisher=American Mathematical Society|year=2009|isbn=9780821886267}}.</ref>

Moreover, given a circumcircle and incircle, each diagonal of the variable polygon is tangent to a fixed circle. <ref>Johnson, Roger A. ''Advanced Euclidean Geometry'', Dover Publ., 2007 (1929), p. 94.</ref>

==References==
{{reflist}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{MathWorld|title=Bicentric polygon|urlname=BicentricPolygon}}
* {{MathWorld|title=Bicentric polygon|urlname=BicentricPolygon}}


{{geometry-stub}}
[[Category:Elementary geometry]]
[[Category:Elementary geometry]]
[[Category:Types of polygons]]

[[sl:bicentrični mnogokotnik]]

Latest revision as of 11:24, 3 November 2020

An equilateral triangle
A bicentric kite
A bicentric isosceles trapezoid
A regular pentagon

In geometry, a bicentric polygon is a tangential polygon (a polygon all of whose sides are tangent to an inner incircle) which is also cyclic — that is, inscribed in an outer circle that passes through each vertex of the polygon. All triangles and all regular polygons are bicentric. On the other hand, a rectangle with unequal sides is not bicentric, because no circle can be tangent to all four sides.

Triangles

[edit]

Every triangle is bicentric.[1] In a triangle, the radii r and R of the incircle and circumcircle respectively are related by the equation

where x is the distance between the centers of the circles.[2] This is one version of Euler's triangle formula.

Bicentric quadrilaterals

[edit]

Not all quadrilaterals are bicentric (having both an incircle and a circumcircle). Given two circles (one within the other) with radii R and r where , there exists a convex quadrilateral inscribed in one of them and tangent to the other if and only if their radii satisfy

where x is the distance between their centers.[2][3] This condition (and analogous conditions for higher order polygons) is known as Fuss' theorem.[4]

Polygons with n > 4

[edit]

A complicated general formula is known for any number n of sides for the relation among the circumradius R, the inradius r, and the distance x between the circumcenter and the incenter.[5] Some of these for specific n are:

where and

Regular polygons

[edit]

Every regular polygon is bicentric.[2] In a regular polygon, the incircle and the circumcircle are concentric—that is, they share a common center, which is also the center of the regular polygon, so the distance between the incenter and circumcenter is always zero. The radius of the inscribed circle is the apothem (the shortest distance from the center to the boundary of the regular polygon).

For any regular polygon, the relations between the common edge length a, the radius r of the incircle, and the radius R of the circumcircle are:

For some regular polygons which can be constructed with compass and ruler, we have the following algebraic formulas for these relations:

3
4
5
6
8
10

Thus we have the following decimal approximations:

Poncelet's porism

[edit]

If two circles are the inscribed and circumscribed circles of a particular bicentric n-gon, then the same two circles are the inscribed and circumscribed circles of infinitely many bicentric n-gons. More precisely, every tangent line to the inner of the two circles can be extended to a bicentric n-gon by placing vertices on the line at the points where it crosses the outer circle, continuing from each vertex along another tangent line, and continuing in the same way until the resulting polygonal chain closes up to an n-gon. The fact that it will always do so is implied by Poncelet's closure theorem, which more generally applies for inscribed and circumscribed conics.[6]

Moreover, given a circumcircle and incircle, each diagonal of the variable polygon is tangent to a fixed circle. [7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Gorini, Catherine A. (2009), The Facts on File Geometry Handbook, Infobase Publishing, p. 17, ISBN 9780816073894.
  2. ^ a b c Reiman, István (2005), International Mathematical Olympiad: 1976-1990, Anthem Press, pp. 170–171, ISBN 9781843312000.
  3. ^ Davison, Charles (1915), Subjects for mathematical essays, Macmillan and co., limited, p. 98.
  4. ^ Dörrie, Heinrich (1965), 100 Great Problems of Elementary Mathematics: Their History and Solution, Courier Dover Publications, p. 192, ISBN 9780486613482.
  5. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Poncelet's Porism." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PonceletsPorism.html
  6. ^ Flatto, Leopold (2009), Poncelet's Theorem, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 9780821886267.
  7. ^ Johnson, Roger A. Advanced Euclidean Geometry, Dover Publ., 2007 (1929), p. 94.
[edit]