Inversive geometry - Biblioteka.sk

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Inversive geometry
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In geometry, inversive geometry is the study of inversion, a transformation of the Euclidean plane that maps circles or lines to other circles or lines and that preserves the angles between crossing curves. Many difficult problems in geometry become much more tractable when an inversion is applied. Inversion seems to have been discovered by a number of people contemporaneously, including Steiner (1824), Quetelet (1825), Bellavitis (1836), Stubbs and Ingram (1842–3) and Kelvin (1845).[1]

The concept of inversion can be generalized to higher-dimensional spaces.

Inversion in a circle

Inversion of lambda Mandelbrot set with different translations

Inverse of a point

P' is the inverse of P with respect to the circle.

To invert a number in arithmetic usually means to take its reciprocal. A closely related idea in geometry is that of "inverting" a point. In the plane, the inverse of a point P with respect to a reference circle (Ø) with center O and radius r is a point P', lying on the ray from O through P such that

This is called circle inversion or plane inversion. The inversion taking any point P (other than O) to its image P' also takes P' back to P, so the result of applying the same inversion twice is the identity transformation which makes it a self-inversion (i.e. an involution).[2][3] To make the inversion a total function that is also defined for O, it is necessary to introduce a point at infinity, a single point placed on all the lines, and extend the inversion, by definition, to interchange the center O and this point at infinity.

It follows from the definition that the inversion of any point inside the reference circle must lie outside it, and vice versa, with the center and the point at infinity changing positions, whilst any point on the circle is unaffected (is invariant under inversion). In summary, for a point inside the circle, the nearer the point to the center, the further away its transformation. While for any point (inside or outside the circle), the nearer the point to the circle, the closer its transformation.

Compass and straightedge construction

To construct the inverse P' of a point P outside a circle Ø: Let r be the radius of Ø. Right triangles OPN and ONP' are similar. OP is to r as r is to OP'.
Point outside circle

To construct the inverse P' of a point P outside a circle Ø:

  • Draw the segment from O (center of circle Ø) to P.
  • Let M be the midpoint of OP. (Not shown)
  • Draw the circle c with center M going through P. (Not labeled. It's the blue circle)
  • Let N and N' be the points where Ø and c intersect.
  • Draw segment NN'.
  • P' is where OP and NN' intersect.
Point inside circle

To construct the inverse P of a point P' inside a circle Ø:

  • Draw ray r from O (center of circle Ø) through P'. (Not labeled, it's the horizontal line)
  • Draw line s through P' perpendicular to r. (Not labeled. It's the vertical line)
  • Let N be one of the points where Ø and s intersect.
  • Draw the segment ON.
  • Draw line t through N perpendicular to ON.
  • P is where ray r and line t intersect.

Dutta's construction

There is a construction of the inverse point to A with respect to a circle P that is independent of whether A is inside or outside P.[4]

Consider a circle P with center O and a point A which may lie inside or outside the circle P.

  • Take the intersection point C of the ray OA with the circle P.
  • Connect the point C with an arbitrary point B on the circle P (different from C and from the point on P antipodal to C)
  • Let h be the reflection of ray BA in line BC. Then h cuts ray OC in a point A'. A' is the inverse point of A with respect to circle P.[4]: § 3.2 

Properties

The inversion of a set of points in the plane with respect to a circle is the set of inverses of these points. The following properties make circle inversion useful.

  • A circle that passes through the center O of the reference circle inverts to a line not passing through O, but parallel to the tangent to the original circle at O, and vice versa; whereas a line passing through O is inverted into itself (but not pointwise invariant).[5]
  • A circle not passing through O inverts to a circle not passing through O. If the circle meets the reference circle, these invariant points of intersection are also on the inverse circle. A circle (or line) is unchanged by inversion if and only if it is orthogonal to the reference circle at the points of intersection.[5]

Additional properties include:

  • If a circle q passes through two distinct points A and A' which are inverses with respect to a circle k, then the circles k and q are orthogonal.
  • If the circles k and q are orthogonal, then a straight line passing through the center O of k and intersecting q, does so at inverse points with respect to k.
  • Given a triangle OAB in which O is the center of a circle k, and points A' and B' inverses of A and B with respect to k, then
  • The points of intersection of two circles p and q orthogonal to a circle k, are inverses with respect to k.
  • If M and M' are inverse points with respect to a circle k on two curves m and m', also inverses with respect to k, then the tangents to m and m' at the points M and M' are either perpendicular to the straight line MM' or form with this line an isosceles triangle with base MM'.
  • Inversion leaves the measure of angles unaltered, but reverses the orientation of oriented angles.[6]

Examples in two dimensions

Examples of inversion of circles A to J with respect to the red circle at O. Circles A to F, which pass through O, map to straight lines. Circles G to J, which do not, map to other circles. The reference circle and line L map to themselves. Circles intersect their inverses, if any, on the reference circle. In the SVG file, click or hover over a circle to highlight it.
  • Inversion of a line is a circle containing the center of inversion; or it is the line itself if it contains the center
  • Inversion of a circle is another circle; or it is a line if the original circle contains the center
  • Inversion of a parabola is a cardioid
  • Inversion of hyperbola is a lemniscate of Bernoulli

Application

For a circle not passing through the center of inversion, the center of the circle being inverted and the center of its image under inversion are collinear with the center of the reference circle. This fact can be used to prove that the Euler line of the intouch triangle of a triangle coincides with its OI line. The proof roughly goes as below:

Invert with respect to the incircle of triangle ABC. 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. Then the inversive distance (usually denoted δ) is defined as the natural logarithm of the ratio of the radii of the two concentric circles.

In addition, any two non-intersecting circles may be inverted into congruent circles, using circle of inversion centered at a point on the circle of antisimilitude.

The Peaucellier–Lipkin linkage is a mechanical implementation of inversion in a circle. It provides an exact solution to the important problem of converting between linear and circular motion.

Pole and polar

The polar line q to a point Q with respect to a circle of radius r centered on the point O. The point P is the inversion point of Q; the polar is the line through P that is perpendicular to the line containing O, P and Q.

If point R is the inverse of point P then the lines perpendicular to the line PR through one of the points is the polar of the other point (the pole).

Poles and polars have several useful properties:

  • If a point P lies on a line l, then the pole L of the line l lies on the polar p of point P.
  • If a point P moves along a line l, its polar p rotates about the pole L of the line l.
  • If two tangent lines can be drawn from a pole to the circle, then its polar passes through both tangent points.
  • If a point lies on the circle, its polar is the tangent through this point.
  • If a point P lies on its own polar line, then P is on the circle.
  • Each line has exactly one pole.

In three dimensions

Inversion of a sphere at the red sphere
Inversion of a spheroid (at the red sphere)
Inversion of a hyperboloid of one sheet

Circle inversion is generalizable to sphere inversion in three dimensions. The inversion of a point P in 3D with respect to a reference sphere centered at a point O with radius R is a point P ' on the ray with direction OP such that . As with the 2D version, a sphere inverts to a sphere, except that if a sphere passes through the center O of the reference sphere, then it inverts to a plane. Any plane passing through O, inverts to a sphere touching at O. A circle, that is, the intersection of a sphere with a secant plane, inverts into a circle, except that if the circle passes through O it inverts into a line. This reduces to the 2D case when the secant plane passes through O, but is a true 3D phenomenon if the secant plane does not pass through O.

Examples in three dimensions

Sphere

The simplest surface (besides a plane) is the sphere. The first picture shows a non trivial inversion (the center of the sphere is not the center of inversion) of a sphere together with two orthogonal intersecting pencils of circles.

Cylinder, cone, torus

The inversion of a cylinder, cone, or torus results in a Dupin cyclide.

Spheroid

A spheroid is a surface of revolution and contains a pencil of circles which is mapped onto a pencil of circles (see picture). The inverse image of a spheroid is a surface of degree 4.

Hyperboloid of one sheet

A hyperboloid of one sheet, which is a surface of revolution contains a pencil of circles which is mapped onto a pencil of circles. A hyperboloid of one sheet contains additional two pencils of lines, which are mapped onto pencils of circles. The picture shows one such line (blue) and its inversion.

Stereographic projection as the inversion of a sphere

Stereographic projection as an inversion of a sphere

A stereographic projection usually projects a sphere from a point (north pole) of the sphere onto the tangent plane at the opposite point (south pole). This mapping can be performed by an inversion of the sphere onto its tangent plane. If the sphere (to be projected) has the equation (alternately written ; center , radius , green in the picture), then it will be mapped by the inversion at the unit sphere (red) onto the tangent plane at point . The lines through the center of inversion (point ) are mapped onto themselves. They are the projection lines of the stereographic projection.

6-sphere coordinates

The 6-sphere coordinates are a coordinate system for three-dimensional space obtained by inverting the Cartesian coordinates.

Axiomatics and generalization

One of the first to consider foundations of inversive geometry was Mario Pieri in 1911 and 1912.[7] Edward Kasner wrote his thesis on "Invariant theory of the inversion group".[8]

More recently the mathematical structure of inversive geometry has been interpreted as an incidence structure where the generalized circles are called "blocks": In incidence geometry, any affine plane together with a single point at infinity forms a Möbius plane, also known as an inversive plane. The point at infinity is added to all the lines. These Möbius planes can be described axiomatically and exist in both finite and infinite versions.

A model for the Möbius plane that comes from the Euclidean plane is the Riemann sphere.

Invariant

The cross-ratio between 4 points is invariant under an inversion. In particular if O is the centre of the inversion and and are distances to the ends of a line L, then length of the line will become under an inversion with radius 1. The invariant is:

Relation to Erlangen program

According to Coxeter,[9] the transformation by inversion in circle was invented by L. I. Magnus in 1831. Since then this mapping has become an avenue to higher mathematics. Through some steps of application of the circle inversion map, a student of transformation geometry soon appreciates the significance of Felix Klein's Erlangen program, an outgrowth of certain models of hyperbolic geometry

Dilation

The combination of two inversions in concentric circles results in a similarity, homothetic transformation, or dilation characterized by the ratio of the circle radii.







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