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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  Euler's line, with the center of the nine-point circle
  Medians (intersect at the centroid)
  Altitudes (intersect at the orthocenter)
  Perpendicular lines from the side midpoints (intersect at the circumcenter)

In geometry, the Euler line, named after Leonhard Euler (/ˈɔɪlər/), is a line determined from any triangle that is not equilateral. It is a central line of the triangle, and it passes through several important points determined from the triangle, including the orthocenter, the circumcenter, the centroid, the Exeter point and the center of the nine-point circle of the triangle.[1]

The concept of a triangle's Euler line extends to the Euler line of other shapes, such as the quadrilateral and the tetrahedron.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Euler line | Special properties and parts of triangles | Geometry | Khan Academy
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  • Euler's line proof | Special properties and parts of triangles | Geometry | Khan Academy
  • Centroid, Orthocenter, Circumcenter : Euler line | Visualization
  • What is Euler's Line and It's Properties?| Triangle | Geometry | Quantitative Aptitude |TalentSprint

Transcription

So I've drawn an arbitrary triangle over here that we will assume is not an equilateral triangle. And let's draw some of the interesting properties of this triangle. So, let's first start with the perpendicular bisectors. So let's say this is the midpoint of this side right over here. So-- draw a little bit closer to the midpoint-- looks like right about there. So this length is equal to this length right over here. And so let me draw a perpendicular bisector. So perpendicular bisector would look something like that for that side. Now let me do it on this side. So just trying to eyeball it, this looks roughly like the midpoint. So this length is going to be equal to this length, and then once again, let me draw a perpendicular bisector, so it's going to go at a 90 degree angle. I can draw a straighter line than that. So that looks pretty good. And it is perpendicular. And then you can imagine I will do it with this side, with side AB. That looks like the midpoint. This length is going to be equal to that length right over there. And then if we draw a perpendicular-- my best attempt to draw this-- it looks something like that. And we've already learned that these three lines will definitely intersect in a unique point right over there, which we call the circumcenter. So let me write it. So this right over there is our circumcenter. This is nothing new. Now let's draw the medians. So, the medians go from each of the vertices to the midpoint of the opposite side. So let me draw. So this is a median, this is a median, this is a median, and then this is-- and all the errors in my drawing will start to become apparent, now that I'm trying to do multiple things with it. But we know all of the medians intersect at the centroid. So this right over here is the centroid. Now let's draw the altitudes of this triangle. So let's draw the altitude. So I'm going to drop a perpendicular right over here. This is one altitude. I will draw another altitude. So remember, it's going to go down like this. Draw another altitude that looks something like that. And then I can draw another altitude from this side, and we know it's going to intersect at this unique point right over here. So I'll try to draw it as neatly as I can. And this is going to be perpendicular, although the way I've drawn it, it doesn't necessarily look that way. And we know that this thing right over here is called an orthocenter. Now the whole reason why I'm doing this, and this is frankly kind of a mind-boggling idea. It's neat enough that each of these points even exists, that three altitudes will intersect in one point, that the three medians intersect in one point, and they have all these neat properties, and that the three perpendicular bisectors intersect in one point. That by itself is neat enough. But what's really neat-- and it's maybe not completely apparent by the way I drew it, because I just drew it free hand-- is that these three points will definitely be on the same line. If this was an equilateral triangle, they would actually be the same point. But for any other triangle there'll be different points, and they will be on the same line. Which is just kind of crazy, because obviously two points define a line, but three points being on the same line is kind of a-- it seems like a very unlikely thing, if you were to just guess it. And I'm going to try to draw it as best as I can. If you were to draw this with a straight edge ruler, it would come out a lot cleaner. But all three points sit on this unique line that, it seems something special or magical about it. And because it's something special or magical, there's one famous mathematician who tends to get all of the most special and mathematical things named after him, because he's the guy who's really explored these things. And we call this the Euler line. And I say that Leonhard Euler-- that looks like ENTER. I say that he gets all of the cool and magical mystical things named after him, because he's also responsible for Euler's identity, which is e to the i pi is equal to negative 1. And we proved this in the calculus playlist, and if none of this makes any sense to you, don't worry. We're only in geometry right now. But he gets to have all the-- This is a magical thing because e comes out of compound interest, and growth and decay, exponential growth and decay. i squared is negative 1-- seems a very bizarre imaginary number. Pi is a ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. And negative 1 is, well, negative 1. And so Euler showed that there's a lot of reason to believe that these four numbers that come from all of these different weird realities of the world are connected in this very tight way. And he also showed that these special points are all on the same line, which tells us something kind of crazy and mystical about our reality. And if that is not enough for you, if you were to take the midpoint on the Euler line between the orthocenter-- I'm not going to prove it here, I'm just going to give you a little bit of a tidbit of it. If you take the midpoint between the orthocenter and the circumcenter-- so let's take this. So I'm going to try to look at it roughly. So it looks like it's right about there. So this length is going to be equal to this length right over here. This point that sits on the Euler line is going to be the center of something called the nine-point circle, which intersects this triangle at nine points. And we'll see this kind of nine interesting points. So let me label that as well. So it's cool enough that these three special points are on the Euler line, but there's actually four special points. And actually, there's a few more than that are kind of interesting. So that orange point right over there is the center of the nine-point circle. And maybe I'll do another video, another video just on that. So anyway, hopefully you found that kind of interesting.

Triangle centers on the Euler line

Individual centers

Euler showed in 1765 that in any triangle, the orthocenter, circumcenter and centroid are collinear.[2] This property is also true for another triangle center, the nine-point center, although it had not been defined in Euler's time. In equilateral triangles, these four points coincide, but in any other triangle they are all distinct from each other, and the Euler line is determined by any two of them.

Other notable points that lie on the Euler line include the de Longchamps point, the Schiffler point, the Exeter point, and the Gossard perspector.[1] However, the incenter generally does not lie on the Euler line;[3] it is on the Euler line only for isosceles triangles,[4] for which the Euler line coincides with the symmetry axis of the triangle and contains all triangle centers.

The tangential triangle of a reference triangle is tangent to the latter's circumcircle at the reference triangle's vertices. The circumcenter of the tangential triangle lies on the Euler line of the reference triangle.[5]: p. 447  [6]: p.104, #211, p.242, #346  The center of similitude of the orthic and tangential triangles is also on the Euler line.[5]: p. 447 [6]: p. 102 

Proofs

A vector proof

Let be a triangle. A proof of the fact that the circumcenter , the centroid and the orthocenter are collinear relies on free vectors. We start by stating the prerequisites. First, satisfies the relation

This follows from the fact that the absolute barycentric coordinates of are . Further, the problem of Sylvester[7] reads as

Now, using the vector addition, we deduce that

By adding these three relations, term by term, we obtain that

In conclusion, , and so the three points , and (in this order) are collinear.

In Dörrie's book,[7] the Euler line and the problem of Sylvester are put together into a single proof. However, most of the proofs of the problem of Sylvester rely on the fundamental properties of free vectors, independently of the Euler line.

Properties

Distances between centers

On the Euler line the centroid G is between the circumcenter O and the orthocenter H and is twice as far from the orthocenter as it is from the circumcenter:[6]: p.102 

The segment GH is a diameter of the orthocentroidal circle.

The center N of the nine-point circle lies along the Euler line midway between the orthocenter and the circumcenter:[1]

Thus the Euler line could be repositioned on a number line with the circumcenter O at the location 0, the centroid G at 2t, the nine-point center at 3t, and the orthocenter H at 6t for some scale factor t.

Furthermore, the squared distance between the centroid and the circumcenter along the Euler line is less than the squared circumradius R2 by an amount equal to one-ninth the sum of the squares of the side lengths a, b, and c:[6]: p.71 

In addition,[6]: p.102 

Representation

Equation

Let A, B, C denote the vertex angles of the reference triangle, and let x : y : z be a variable point in trilinear coordinates; then an equation for the Euler line is

An equation for the Euler line in barycentric coordinates is[8]

Parametric representation

Another way to represent the Euler line is in terms of a parameter t. Starting with the circumcenter (with trilinear coordinates ) and the orthocenter (with trilinears every point on the Euler line, except the orthocenter, is given by the trilinear coordinates

formed as a linear combination of the trilinears of these two points, for some t.

For example:

  • The circumcenter has trilinears corresponding to the parameter value
  • The centroid has trilinears corresponding to the parameter value
  • The nine-point center has trilinears corresponding to the parameter value
  • The de Longchamps point has trilinears corresponding to the parameter value

Slope

In a Cartesian coordinate system, denote the slopes of the sides of a triangle as and and denote the slope of its Euler line as . Then these slopes are related according to[9]: Lemma 1 

Thus the slope of the Euler line (if finite) is expressible in terms of the slopes of the sides as

Moreover, the Euler line is parallel to an acute triangle's side BC if and only if[9]: p.173 

Relation to inscribed equilateral triangles

The locus of the centroids of equilateral triangles inscribed in a given triangle is formed by two lines perpendicular to the given triangle's Euler line.[10]: Coro. 4 

In special triangles

Right triangle

In a right triangle, the Euler line coincides with the median to the hypotenuse—that is, it goes through both the right-angled vertex and the midpoint of the side opposite that vertex. This is because the right triangle's orthocenter, the intersection of its altitudes, falls on the right-angled vertex while its circumcenter, the intersection of its perpendicular bisectors of sides, falls on the midpoint of the hypotenuse.

Isosceles triangle

The Euler line of an isosceles triangle coincides with the axis of symmetry. In an isosceles triangle the incenter falls on the Euler line.

Automedian triangle

The Euler line of an automedian triangle (one whose medians are in the same proportions, though in the opposite order, as the sides) is perpendicular to one of the medians.[11]

Systems of triangles with concurrent Euler lines

Consider a triangle ABC with Fermat–Torricelli points F1 and F2. The Euler lines of the 10 triangles with vertices chosen from A, B, C, F1 and F2 are concurrent at the centroid of triangle ABC.[12]

The Euler lines of the four triangles formed by an orthocentric system (a set of four points such that each is the orthocenter of the triangle with vertices at the other three points) are concurrent at the nine-point center common to all of the triangles.[6]: p.111 

Generalizations

Quadrilateral

In a convex quadrilateral, the quasiorthocenter H, the "area centroid" G, and the quasicircumcenter O are collinear in this order on the Euler line, and HG = 2GO.[13]

Tetrahedron

A tetrahedron is a three-dimensional object bounded by four triangular faces. Seven lines associated with a tetrahedron are concurrent at its centroid; its six midplanes intersect at its Monge point; and there is a circumsphere passing through all of the vertices, whose center is the circumcenter. These points define the "Euler line" of a tetrahedron analogous to that of a triangle. The centroid is the midpoint between its Monge point and circumcenter along this line. The center of the twelve-point sphere also lies on the Euler line.

Simplicial polytope

A simplicial polytope is a polytope whose facets are all simplices (plural of simplex). For example, every polygon is a simplicial polytope. The Euler line associated to such a polytope is the line determined by its centroid and circumcenter of mass. This definition of an Euler line generalizes the ones above.[14]

Suppose that is a polygon. The Euler line is sensitive to the symmetries of in the following ways:

1. If has a line of reflection symmetry , then is either or a point on .

2. If has a center of rotational symmetry , then .

3. If all but one of the sides of have equal length, then is orthogonal to the last side.

Related constructions

A triangle's Kiepert parabola is the unique parabola that is tangent to the sides (two of them extended) of the triangle and has the Euler line as its directrix.[15]: p. 63 

References

  1. ^ a b c Kimberling, Clark (1998). "Triangle centers and central triangles". Congressus Numerantium. 129: i–xxv, 1–295.
  2. ^ Euler, Leonhard (1767). "Solutio facilis problematum quorundam geometricorum difficillimorum" [Easy solution of some difficult geometric problems]. Novi Commentarii Academiae Scientarum Imperialis Petropolitanae. 11: 103–123. E325. Reprinted in Opera Omnia, ser. I, vol. XXVI, pp. 139–157, Societas Scientiarum Naturalium Helveticae, Lausanne, 1953, MR0061061. Summarized at: Dartmouth College.
  3. ^ Schattschneider, Doris; King, James (1997). Geometry Turned On: Dynamic Software in Learning, Teaching, and Research. The Mathematical Association of America. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0883850992.
  4. ^ Edmonds, Allan L.; Hajja, Mowaffaq; Martini, Horst (2008), "Orthocentric simplices and biregularity", Results in Mathematics, 52 (1–2): 41–50, doi:10.1007/s00025-008-0294-4, MR 2430410, S2CID 121434528, It is well known that the incenter of a Euclidean triangle lies on its Euler line connecting the centroid and the circumcenter if and only if the triangle is isosceles.
  5. ^ a b Leversha, Gerry; Smith, G. C. (November 2007), "Euler and triangle geometry", Mathematical Gazette, 91 (522): 436–452, doi:10.1017/S0025557200182087, JSTOR 40378417, S2CID 125341434.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Altshiller-Court, Nathan, College Geometry, Dover Publications, 2007 (orig. Barnes & Noble 1952).
  7. ^ a b Dörrie, Heinrich, "100 Great Problems of Elementary Mathematics. Their History and Solution". Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1965, ISBN 0-486-61348-8, pages 141 (Euler's Straight Line) and 142 (Problem of Sylvester)
  8. ^ Scott, J.A., "Some examples of the use of areal coordinates in triangle geometry", Mathematical Gazette 83, November 1999, 472-477.
  9. ^ a b Wladimir G. Boskoff, Laurent¸iu Homentcovschi, and Bogdan D. Suceava, "Gossard's Perspector and Projective Consequences", Forum Geometricorum, Volume 13 (2013), 169–184. [1]
  10. ^ Francisco Javier Garc ́ıa Capita ́n, "Locus of Centroids of Similar Inscribed Triangles", Forum Geometricorum 16, 2016, 257–267 .http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2016volume16/FG201631.pdf
  11. ^ Parry, C. F. (1991), "Steiner–Lehmus and the automedian triangle", The Mathematical Gazette, 75 (472): 151–154, doi:10.2307/3620241, JSTOR 3620241.
  12. ^ Beluhov, Nikolai Ivanov. "Ten concurrent Euler lines", Forum Geometricorum 9, 2009, pp. 271–274. http://forumgeom.fau.edu/FG2009volume9/FG200924index.html
  13. ^ Myakishev, Alexei (2006), "On Two Remarkable Lines Related to a Quadrilateral" (PDF), Forum Geometricorum, 6: 289–295.
  14. ^ Tabachnikov, Serge; Tsukerman, Emmanuel (May 2014), "Circumcenter of Mass and Generalized Euler Line", Discrete and Computational Geometry, 51 (4): 815–836, arXiv:1301.0496, doi:10.1007/s00454-014-9597-2, S2CID 12307207.
  15. ^ Scimemi, Benedetto, "Simple Relations Regarding the Steiner Inellipse of a Triangle", Forum Geometricorum 10, 2010: 55–77.

External links

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