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Article

Hagge Configurations and a Projective Generalization of Inversion

Department of Geometry, Institute of Mathematics, University of Debrecen, H-4010 Debrecen, Hungary
Geometry 2024, 1(1), 23-26; https://doi.org/10.3390/geometry1010004
Submission received: 11 October 2024 / Revised: 1 November 2024 / Accepted: 8 November 2024 / Published: 12 November 2024

Abstract

:
In this article, we provide elementary proofs of two projective generalizations of Hagge’s theorems. We describe Steiner’s correspondence as a projective generalization of inversion.

1. Introduction

The discovery of Hagge’s circle by K. Hagge in 1907 [1] opened new perspectives in classical geometry [2,3,4]. In a recent paper [5], Bradley described two generalizations of Hagge’s theorems. By means of coordinate calculations, first he proved the following:
Theorem 1.
Let a triangle A B C be given in the Euclidean plane. Let D be a point, not lying on the side lines of the triangle, and let Σ be a circle passing through D. If Σ D meets the circles B C D , A C D , and A B D at the points U, V, and W, and meets the lines A D , B D , and C D at the points X, Y, and Z, respectively, then the lines U X , V Y , and W Z are concurrent. (see Figure 1).
Next, he deduced an essentially projective generalization of the following result:
Theorem 2.
Let a triangle A B C be given in the Euclidean plane. Let D, E, and F be non-colinear points, neither of which lies on a side line of the triangle. If a conic Σ passes through the points D, E, and F, and if Σ D meets the conics B C D E F , A C D E F , and A B D E F at the points U, V, and W, and meets the lines A D , B D , and C D at the points X, Y, and Z, then the lines U X , V Y , W Z are concurrent. (see Figure 2).
Theorem 2 indeed reduces to Theorem 1 if E and F are the ’circular points at infinity’. In this note, we present synthetic, elementary proofs for both of these theorems. Our proof for Theorem 2 does not rely on Theorem 1 (so we may immediately deduce the first theorem from the second one). The reasoning applied in the proof of Theorem 2 is a substantial refinement of that in the proof of Theorem 1. In fact, we show that Theorem 2 is valid in any Pappian projective plane satisfying Fano’s axiom.
In both proofs, we need the following basic facts from projective geometry.
Let a Pappian plane be given, satisfying Fano’s axiom. Then, we have
(A) The three pairs of opposite sides of a complete quadrangle meet any line (not passing through a vertex) in the three pairs of an involution.
(B) If U, V, W, X, Y, and Z are six points on a conic, then the three lines  U X , V Y , and W Z  are concurrent, if and only if, (UX), (VY), and (WZ) are pairs of an involution on the conic.
For a proof, we refer to Coxeter’s book [6].

2. An Elementary Proof of Theorem 1

We may interpret the Euclidean plane as a part of its projective closure. The latter is a Pappian plane satisfying Fano’s axiom (in fact, it is isomorphic to the real projective plane).
Apply an inversion of pole D, denoting the images of points and sets by a prime. Then, the sets
D , A , X , D , B , Y , D , C , Z , A , B , W , A , C , V , B , C , U
are colinear. Therefore, the opposite sides of the complete quadrangle A B C D meet the line Σ at the pairs ( U X ) , ( V Y ) , and ( W Z ) . With (A), these are the three pairs of an involution. On the other hand, inversion preserves cross ratio cr, and pairs ( P 1 P 1 ) , ( P 2 P 2 ) , and ( P 3 P 3 ) are pairs of an involution, if and only if cr ( P 1 , P 2 , P 3 , P 3 ) = cr ( P 1 , P 2 , P 3 , P 3 ) . Thus, the involution sends the pairs ( U X ) , ( V Y ) , and ( W Z ) to the pairs of an involution on the circle Σ = ( Σ ) . Hence, by (B), the lines
U X , V Y , W Z
are concurrent. (see Figure 3).

3. An Elementary Proof of Theorem 2

In this section, we consider a Pappian projective plane P satisfying Fano’s axiom. First, we collect some basic facts concerning the so-called Steiner correspondence. These suggest that it is a good candidate for a purely projective generalization of inversion. Indeed, Steiner correspondence will play the same role in the proof of Theorem 2 as inversion in the proof of Theorem 1.
Let Σ 1 and Σ 2 be two fixed conics in P .
(1) It is known (see, e.g., [7]) that Σ 1 and Σ 2 have a common self-polar triangle Δ = D 1 , D 2 , D 3 . For every point P P Δ , let p 1 and p 2 be the polars of P with respect to Σ 1 and Σ 2 , respectively. Then, the mapping
S : P Δ P , P P : = p 1 p 2
is said to be the Steiner correspondence with respect to Σ 1 and Σ 2 . If P = S ( P ) , then we say that the points P and P are in Steiner correspondence. Notice that if P is a vertex of Δ , e.g., P = D 1 , then p 1 = p 2 = D 2 D 3 , so the Steiner correspondence cannot be defined. Over
P D 1 D 2 D 2 D 3 D 3 D 1
S is involutive and hence invertible.
(2) Let l P be a line, not passing through any vertices of Δ . We show that the set
S ( l ) = S ( P ) P | P l
is a conic. Let L 1 and L 2 be the poles of l with respect to Σ 1 and Σ 2 , and consider the pencils L i with centers L i , i 1 , 2 . Then, for each point P l , the point P = S ( P ) can be obtained as the intersection of two corresponding lines in L 1 and L 2 . Since there is a projectivity between L i and the range of all points on l for i 1 , 2 , it follows that we also have a projectivity f : L 1 L 2 . Then, by Steiner’s characterization of conics, the locus of points m f ( m ) , m L 1 is a conic. Clearly, this conic is just the set S ( l ) .
(3) Observe that the conic S ( l ) contains the vertices of Δ , since S sends every side line of Δ into the vertex opposite to the side. From the involutiveness of S , it follows that the image of a conic passing through a vertex of  Δ  is a line.
(4) By the reasoning applied in Observation (2), we can also see that the Steiner correspondence sends the pairs of an involution of points on l to the pairs of an involution of points on the conic S ( l ) .
(5) Suppose, finally, that the line l P  passes through a vertex D Δ . We claim that, in this case, the image of l D under S is a range of points on a line. Indeed, using the same notation as in Observation (2), the poles L 1 and L 2 are on the side line d opposite to D. d is the polar of D, so the projectivity f : L 1 L 2 sends d into itself. Therefore, f is a perspectivity, and the points m f ( m ) and ( m L 1 ) are colinear. Again, this point set is just S ( l D ) .
Now, we are in a position to prove Theorem 2 in the given Pappian plane P . Consider two conics Σ 1 and Σ 2 with the same self-polar triangle D E F . Let
S : P D , E , F P , P S ( P ) = P
be the Steiner correspondence with respect to Σ 1 and Σ 2 . Then, the sets
U , V , W , U , A , C , V , B , C , W , A , B
are colinear. So, via Observation (5),
X = D A U V , Y = D B U V , Z = D C U V .
Thus, the opposite side lines of the complete quadrangle A B C D meet the line U V at the pairs of points ( U X ) , ( V Y ) , ( W Z ) . These are the pairs of an involution on the line U V . Therefore, in view of Observation (4), their images ( U X ) , ( V Y ) , and ( W Z ) under S are the pairs of an involution on the conic Σ . According to our construction, this is equivalent to the property that the lines U X , V Y , and W Z are concurrent.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

No new data were created or analyzed in this study. Data sharing is not applicable to this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflicts of interest.

References

  1. Hagge, K. Der Fuhrmannsche Kreis und der Brocardsche Kreis als Sonderfälle eines allgemeineren Kreises. Z. Math. Unterr. 1907, 38, 257–269. [Google Scholar]
  2. Bradley, C.J.; Smith, G.C. On a construction of Hagge. Forum Geom. 2007, 7, 231–247. [Google Scholar]
  3. Johnson, R.A. Advanced Euclidean Geometry; Dover Publications: New York, NY, USA, 1960. [Google Scholar]
  4. Peiser, A.M. The Hagge circle of a triangle. Am. Math. Mon. 1942, 49, 524–527. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Bradley, C.J. Generalizations of Hagge’s Theorems. arXiv 2010, arXiv:1007.2762. [Google Scholar]
  6. Coxeter, H.S.M. The Real Projective Plane, 2nd ed.; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, 1955. [Google Scholar]
  7. Hatton, J.L.S. The Principles of Projective Geometry Applied to the Straight Line and Conic; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, 1913. [Google Scholar]
Figure 1. Theorem 1.
Figure 1. Theorem 1.
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Figure 2. Theorem 2.
Figure 2. Theorem 2.
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Figure 3. The proof of Theorem 1.
Figure 3. The proof of Theorem 1.
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Szilasi, Z. Hagge Configurations and a Projective Generalization of Inversion. Geometry 2024, 1, 23-26. https://doi.org/10.3390/geometry1010004

AMA Style

Szilasi Z. Hagge Configurations and a Projective Generalization of Inversion. Geometry. 2024; 1(1):23-26. https://doi.org/10.3390/geometry1010004

Chicago/Turabian Style

Szilasi, Zoltán. 2024. "Hagge Configurations and a Projective Generalization of Inversion" Geometry 1, no. 1: 23-26. https://doi.org/10.3390/geometry1010004

APA Style

Szilasi, Z. (2024). Hagge Configurations and a Projective Generalization of Inversion. Geometry, 1(1), 23-26. https://doi.org/10.3390/geometry1010004

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