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Circumellipse of a triangle whose center is the triangle's centroid From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In geometry, the Steiner ellipse of a triangle is the unique circumellipse (an ellipse that touches the triangle at its vertices) whose center is the triangle's centroid.[1] It is also called the Steiner circumellipse, to distinguish it from the Steiner inellipse. Named after Jakob Steiner, it is an example of a circumconic. By comparison the circumcircle of a triangle is another circumconic that touches the triangle at its vertices, but is not centered at the triangle's centroid unless the triangle is equilateral.
The area of the Steiner ellipse equals the area of the triangle times and hence is 4 times the area of the Steiner inellipse. The Steiner ellipse has the least area of any ellipse circumscribed about the triangle.[1]
The Steiner ellipse is the scaled Steiner inellipse (factor 2, center is the centroid). Hence both ellipses are similar (have the same eccentricity).
A) For an equilateral triangle the Steiner ellipse is the circumcircle, which is the only ellipse, that fulfills the preconditions. The desired ellipse has to contain the triangle reflected at the center of the ellipse. This is true for the circumcircle. A conic is uniquely determined by 5 points. Hence the circumcircle is the only Steiner ellipse.
B) Because an arbitrary triangle is the affine image of an equilateral triangle, an ellipse is the affine image of the unit circle and the centroid of a triangle is mapped onto the centroid of the image triangle, the property (a unique circumellipse with the centroid as center) is true for any triangle.
The area of the circumcircle of an equilateral triangle is -fold of the area of the triangle. An affine map preserves the ratio of areas. Hence the statement on the ratio is true for any triangle and its Steiner ellipse.
An ellipse can be drawn (by computer or by hand), if besides the center at least two conjugate points on conjugate diameters are known. In this case
Let be a triangle and its centroid . The shear mapping with axis through and parallel to transforms the triangle onto the isosceles triangle (see diagram). Point is a vertex of the Steiner ellipse of triangle . A second vertex of this ellipse lies on , because is perpendicular to (symmetry reasons). This vertex can be determined from the data (ellipse with center through and , ) by calculation. It turns out that
Or by drawing: Using de la Hire's method (see center diagram) vertex of the Steiner ellipse of the isosceles triangle is determined.
The inverse shear mapping maps back to and point is fixed, because it is a point on the shear axis. Hence semi diameter is conjugate to .
With help of this pair of conjugate semi diameters the ellipse can be drawn, by hand or by computer.
Given: Triangle
Wanted: Parametric representation and equation of its Steiner ellipse
The centroid of the triangle is
Parametric representation:
From the investigation of the previous section one gets the following parametric representation of the Steiner ellipse:
The roles of the points for determining the parametric representation can be changed.
Example (see diagram): .
Equation:
If the origin is the centroid of the triangle (center of the Steiner ellipse) the equation corresponding to the parametric representation is
with .[2]
Example: The centroid of triangle is the origin. From the vectors one gets the equation of the Steiner ellipse:
If the vertices are already known (see above), the semi axes can be determined. If one is interested in the axes and eccentricity only, the following method is more appropriate:
Let be the semi axes of the Steiner ellipse. From Apollonios theorem on properties of conjugate semi diameters of ellipses one gets:
Denoting the right hand sides of the equations by and respectively and transforming the non linear system (respecting ) leads to:
Solving for and one gets the semi axes:
with .
The linear eccentricity of the Steiner ellipse is
and the area
One should not confuse in this section with other meanings in this article !
The equation of the Steiner circumellipse in trilinear coordinates is[1]
for side lengths a, b, c.
The semi-major and semi-minor axes (of a triangle with sides of length a, b, c) have lengths[1]
and focal length
where
The foci are called the Bickart points of the triangle.
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