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Simson line

The Simson line LN (red) of the triangle ABC with respect to point P on the circumcircle

In geometry, given a triangle ABC and a point P on its circumcircle, the three closest points to P on lines AB, AC, and BC are collinear.[1] The line through these points is the Simson line of P, named for Robert Simson.[2] The concept was first published, however, by William Wallace in 1799,[3] and is sometimes called the Wallace line.[4]

The converse is also true; if the three closest points to P on three lines are collinear, and no two of the lines are parallel, then P lies on the circumcircle of the triangle formed by the three lines. Or in other words, the Simson line of a triangle ABC and a point P is just the pedal triangle of ABC and P that has degenerated into a straight line and this condition constrains the locus of P to trace the circumcircle of triangle ABC.

Equation

Placing the triangle in the complex plane, let the triangle ABC with unit circumcircle have vertices whose locations have complex coordinates a, b, c, and let P with complex coordinates p be a point on the circumcircle. The Simson line is the set of points z satisfying[5]: Proposition 4 

where an overbar indicates complex conjugation.

Properties

Simson lines (in red) are tangents to the Steiner deltoid (in blue).

Proof of existence

It suffices to show that .

is a cyclic quadrilateral, so . is a cyclic quadrilateral (since ), so . Hence . Now is cyclic, so .

Therefore .

Generalizations

Generalization 1

The projections of Ap, Bp, Cp onto BC, CA, AB are three collinear points
A projective version of a Simson line

Generalization 2

Generalization 3

See also

References

  1. ^ H.S.M. Coxeter and S.L. Greitzer, Geometry revisited, Math. Assoc. America, 1967: p.41.
  2. ^ "Gibson History 7 - Robert Simson". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. 2008-01-30.
  3. ^ "William Wallace". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
  4. ^ Clawson, J. W. (1919). "A Theorem in the Geometry of the Triangle". The American Mathematical Monthly. 26 (2): 59–62. JSTOR 2973140.
  5. ^ Todor Zaharinov, "The Simson triangle and its properties", Forum Geometricorum 17 (2017), 373--381. http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2017volume17/FG201736.pdf
  6. ^ Daniela Ferrarello, Maria Flavia Mammana, and Mario Pennisi, "Pedal Polygons", Forum Geometricorum 13 (2013) 153–164: Theorem 4.
  7. ^ Olga Radko and Emmanuel Tsukerman, "The Perpendicular Bisector Construction, the Isoptic point, and the Simson Line of a Quadrilateral", Forum Geometricorum 12 (2012). [1]
  8. ^ Tsukerman, Emmanuel (2013). "On Polygons Admitting a Simson Line as Discrete Analogs of Parabolas" (PDF). Forum Geometricorum. 13: 197–208.
  9. ^ "A Generalization of Simson Line". Cut-the-knot. April 2015.
  10. ^ Nguyen Van Linh (2016), "Another synthetic proof of Dao's generalization of the Simson line theorem" (PDF), Forum Geometricorum, 16: 57–61
  11. ^ Nguyen Le Phuoc and Nguyen Chuong Chi (2016). 100.24 A synthetic proof of Dao's generalisation of the Simson line theorem. The Mathematical Gazette, 100, pp 341-345. doi:10.1017/mag.2016.77. The Mathematical Gazette
  12. ^ Smith, Geoff (2015), "99.20 A projective Simson line", The Mathematical Gazette, 99 (545): 339–341, doi:10.1017/mag.2015.47, S2CID 124965348

External links