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  2. Circumcircle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumcircle

    The circumcenter is the point of intersection between the three perpendicular bisectors of the triangle's sides, and is a triangle center. More generally, an n -sided polygon with all its vertices on the same circle, also called the circumscribed circle, is called a cyclic polygon , or in the special case n = 4 , a cyclic quadrilateral .

  3. Cyclic quadrilateral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_quadrilateral

    Examples of cyclic quadrilaterals. In Euclidean geometry, a cyclic quadrilateral or inscribed quadrilateral is a quadrilateral whose vertices all lie on a single circle.This circle is called the circumcircle or circumscribed circle, and the vertices are said to be concyclic.

  4. Triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle

    The three perpendicular bisectors meet in a single point, the triangle's circumcenter; this point is the center of the circumcircle, the circle passing through all three vertices. [20] Thales' theorem implies that if the circumcenter is located on the side of the triangle, then the angle opposite that side is a right angle. [21]

  5. Orthocentric system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthocentric_system

    Common nine-point circle, where N, O 4, A 4 are the nine-point center, circumcenter, and orthocenter respectively of the triangle formed from the other three orthocentric points A 1, A 2, A 3. The center of this common nine-point circle lies at the centroid of the four orthocentric points. The radius of the common nine-point circle is the ...

  6. Triangle center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_center

    In geometry, a triangle center or triangle centre is a point in the triangle's plane that is in some sense in the middle of the triangle. For example, the centroid, circumcenter, incenter and orthocenter were familiar to the ancient Greeks, and can be obtained by simple constructions.

  7. Delaunay triangulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaunay_triangulation

    In the plane (d = 2), if there are b vertices on the convex hull, then any triangulation of the points has at most 2n – 2 – b triangles, plus one exterior face (see Euler characteristic). If points are distributed according to a Poisson process in the plane with constant intensity, then each vertex has on average six surrounding triangles.

  8. Acute and obtuse triangles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_and_obtuse_triangles

    Likewise, a triangle's circumcenter—the intersection of the three sides' perpendicular bisectors, which is the center of the circle that passes through all three vertices—falls inside an acute triangle but outside an obtuse triangle. The right triangle is the in-between case: both its circumcenter and its orthocenter lie on its boundary.

  9. Inversive geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversive_geometry

    The medial triangle of the intouch triangle is inverted into triangle ABC, meaning the circumcenter of the medial triangle, that is, the nine-point center of the intouch triangle, the incenter and circumcenter of triangle ABC are collinear. Any two non-intersecting circles may be inverted into concentric circles.