Circumcircles and Incircles of Triangles: I. Circumcircle of A Triangle
Circumcircles and Incircles of Triangles: I. Circumcircle of A Triangle
Circumcircles and Incircles of Triangles: I. Circumcircle of A Triangle
I. Circumcircle of a Triangle
Proof
Given ABC, construct the perpendicular bisectors of
sides AB and AC.
(Recall that a perpendicular bisector is a line that
forms a right angle with one of the triangle's sides and
intersects that side at its midpoint.)
Now consider any point X on segment AE. We find from the Pythagorean Theorem that
OA = OE 2 + EA2 = OE 2 + ( EX + XA ) 2 > OE 2 + EX 2 = OX .
In a similar way, we can establish that r = OA = OB = OC is greater than the distance from O
to any other point Z on ABC.
Hence, the circle with center at O and radius r circumscribes the triangle.
2
i. If and
a only if a triangle is acute
a
(alll angles smaaller than a right
r angle),
the circumcenteer lies insidee the trianglee.
ii. If and
a only if itt is obtuse
(ha
as one angle bigger than a right anglle),
the circumcenteer lies outsidde the trianglle.
Theorem
m: The ratio that appearss in the Law of Sines is the diameter of the circum
mcircle of
ABC:
a b c
d = = =
sin sin ssin
Proof
Given ABC , let O denote thhe center of its
circumcirrcle. Observ OC = 2 :BAC
ve that :BO :
due to the Inscribed and
a Central Angle Theorem.
That is,
:B BOC = 2 . (1)
O
Let M be
b the midpo
oint of BC.
Then BOM
B y COM
C by the Side-Side-Siide
Theorem.
3
So we have that
1
:BOM =:COM = :BOC , (2)
2
since corresponding angles in congruent triangles are equal.
BM 2 BM BM + MC BC a
sin = = = = = .
BO 2 BO 2r 2r d
a
Therefore, d = .
sin
Hence, by applying the Law of Sines, we may conclude that
a b c
d = = = .
sin sin sin
Proof
Given ABC , bisect the angles at the vertices
A and B. These angle bisectors must intersect at a
point, O . Locate the points D , E and F on sides
AB, BC and CA respectively so that
Observe that
Since corresponding sides of congruent triangles are equal, we also know that
OD = OF and OD = OE.
4
Hence, OD = OF = OE .
So the circle with center O and radius r is an incircle for the triangle. Further, it is the only
one, since any point equidistant from segments AB and BC must necessarily lie on line OB: the
bisector of :ABC ; and similarly, any point equidistant from segments CA and AB must lie
on line OA: the bisector of :CAB . Therefore, O must be the center of the incircle for the
ABC.
2 Area ( ABC )
r = .
Perimeter ( ABC )
Proof
Thus,
1 1 1
Area ( ABC ) = ( AB r ) + ( BC r ) + ( CA r ) .
2 2 2
That is,
r
Area ( ABC ) = ( AB + BC + CA ) .
2
So,
r
Area ( ABC ) = Perimeter ( ABC ).
2
Therefore,
2 Area ( ABC )
r = .
Perimeter ( ABC )
5
Exercises
1. Find the radii of each of the three circles in the figure below.
2. Find the radii of each of the circles in the given equilateral triangle. Take the side length to be
1 unit in each case.
a. b.