Lester's theorem

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File:Lester theorem.svg
The Fermat points X_{13},X_{14}, the center X_5 of the nine-point circle (light blue), and the circumcenter X_3 of the green triangle lie on the Lester circle (black).

In Euclidean plane geometry, Lester's theorem, named after June Lester, states that in any scalene triangle, the two Fermat points, the nine-point center, and the circumcenter lie on the same circle.

Proofs

Gibert's proof using the Kiepert hyperbola

Lester's circle theorem follows from a more general result by B. Gibert (2000); namely, that every circle whose diameter is a chord of the Kiepert hyperbola of the triangle and is perpendicular to its Euler line passes through the Fermat points.[1] [2]

Dao's lemma on the rectangular hyperbola

File:A generalization Lester theorem1.svg
Dao's lemma on a rectangular hyperbola

In 2014, Dao Thanh Oai showed that Gibert's result follows from a property of rectangular hyperbolas. Namely, let H and G lie on one branch of a rectangular hyperbola S, and F_+ and F_- be the two points on S, symmetrical about its center (antipodal points), where the tangents at S are parallel to the line HG,

Let K_+ and K_- two points on the hyperbola the tangents at which intersect at a point E on the line HG. If the line K_+K_- intersects HG at D, and the perpendicular bisector of DE intersects the hyperbola at G_+ and G_-, then the six points F_+,F_-,E,F,G_+,G_- lie on a circle.

To get Lester's theorem from this result, take S as the Kiepert hyperbola of the triangle, take F_+,F_- to be its Fermat points, K_+,K_- be the inner and outer Vecten points, H,G be the orthocenter and the centroid of the triangle.[3]

Generalisation

File:A generalization Lester circle associated with Neuberg cubic 1.svg
A generalization Lester circle associated with Neuberg cubic: P, Q(P), X_{13}, X_{14} lie on a circle

There is a conjecture generalization of the Lester theorem was published in Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers as follows: Let P be a point on the Neuberg cubic. Let P_A be the reflection of P in line BC, and define P_B and P_C cyclically. It is known that the lines AP_A, BP_B, CP_C concur. Let Q(P) be the point of concurrence. Then the following 4 points lie on a circle: X_{13}, X_{14}, P, Q(P). [4] When P=X(3), it is well-known that Q(P)=Q(X_3)=X_5, the conjecture becomes Lester theorem.

See also

Notes

  1. Paul Yiu (2010), The circles of Lester, Evans, Parry, and their generalizations. Forum Geometricorum, volume 10, pages 175–209. MR 2868943
  2. B. Gibert (2000): [ Message 1270]. Entry in the Hyacinthos online forum, 2000-08-22. Accessed on 2014-10-09.
  3. Dao Thanh Oai (2014), A Simple Proof of Gibert’s Generalization of the Lester Circle Theorem Forum Geometricorum, volume 14, pages 201–202. MR 3208157
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

References

  • Clark Kimberling, "Lester Circle", Mathematics Teacher, volume 89, number 26, 1996.
  • June A. Lester, "Triangles III: Complex triangle functions", Aequationes Mathematicae, volume 53, pages 4–35, 1997.
  • Michael Trott, "Applying GroebnerBasis to Three Problems in Geometry", Mathematica in Education and Research, volume 6, pages 15–28, 1997.
  • Ron Shail, "A proof of Lester's Theorem", Mathematical Gazette, volume 85, pages 225–232, 2001.
  • John Rigby, "A simple proof of Lester's theorem", Mathematical Gazette, volume 87, pages 444–452, 2003.
  • J.A. Scott, "On the Lester circle and the Archimedean triangle", Mathematical Gazette, volume 89, pages 498–500, 2005.
  • Michael Duff, "A short projective proof of Lester's theorem", Mathematical Gazette, volume 89, pages 505–506, 2005.
  • Stan Dolan, "Man versus Computer", Mathematical Gazette, volume 91, pages 469–480, 2007.

External links