Lemmas in Olympiad Geometry
Lemmas in Olympiad Geometry
Navneel Singhal
July 14, 2016
Geometry is the art of correct reasoning from incorrectly drawn
figures.
- Henri Poincare
Introduction
Some Notations
By (XY Z) we denote the circumcircle of XY Z, by (XY ) the circle with
XY as diameter, and by (M, r) the circle with centre M and radius r, the
radius being dropped when the context is clear.
We denote H as the orthocentre, O as the circumcentre, G as the centroid,
N as the nine-point centre, I as the incentre, Na as the Nagel point and
Ge as the Gergonne point of ABC
BJ
JC
2
= ( AB
AC )
Let the touchpoint of the incircle with BC, CA, AB be D, E and F respectively.
The A-excircle touches the side BC at D0 .
(Diameter of incircle) Let the diameter of the incircle through D be DD00 .
Then A, D00 and D0 are collinear and D and D0 are isotomic points with
respect to side BC.
(Diameter of excircle)Let the diameter of the excircle through D0 be D0 D1 .
Then A, D and D1 are collinear.
(Fact 5) The midpoints of the arcs BC, CA and AB are equidistant from
the incenter, respective endpoints of the arcs and the respective excenter.
The diameter of the incircle DD00 , the A-median and the A-touch-chord
of the incircle are concurrent.
Let the A-touch chord of the incircle be EF with E on AC and F on AB.
Then the B-midline, C-bisector, EF and the circle with BC as diameter
concur at X such that F XIDB is a cyclic pentagon.
Let IA , IB and IC be the excenters, MA , MB and MC be the arc midpoints
of the arcs of (ABC) cut off by the sides containing exactly 2 vertices,
MA0 , MB0 and MC0 be the antipodes of MA , MB and MC respectively. Then
I is the orthocenter of IA IB IC . MA0 , MB0 and MC0 are the midpoints of
the sides of 4IA IB IC and 4ABC is the orthic triangle of 4IA IB IC , with
(ABC) being the nine-point circle of 4IA IB IC . Also, IC IB CB is cyclic
with IC IB as the diameter. The contact triangle is also homothetic with
4IA IB IC .
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If Y and Z are the feet of the B- and the C- bisectors on the opposite
sides then OIA Y Z.
A circle through A cuts the sides AB and AC at B 0 and C 0 such that
BB 0 = CC 0 iff it passes through MA0 .
The medial triangle and the triangle homothetic to 4ABC at Na with
ratio 12 share a common incircle.
Na is the incenter of the antimedial triangle, or we can say that I is the
Nagel point of the medial triangle.
Triangle centers
(Nagel Line) G, I and Na are collinear, and GNa = 2IG.
(Isogonal Conjugate) Q is said to be the isogonal conjugate of a point
P not on the sides of 4ABC if P A and QA are reflections of each other
in the angle bisector of A, P B and QB are reflections of each other in
the angle bisector of B, and P C and QC are reflections of each other in
the angle bisector of C.
Note that some of the properties mentioned out here are theorems and not
lemmas.
The locus of the geometric transform is the transform of the locus. (incredibly useful)
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are all concurrent at a point P which bisects the first three segments and
divides the last four in a ratio 3:1.
If in the above lemma the quadrilateral is cyclic and the orthocentres
of the triangles BCD, CDA, DAB, ABC are H1 , H2 , H3 , H4 respectively
then AH1 , BH2 , CH3 , DH4 are concurrent at the reflection of the centre
of the circle in P, say Q. Also Q is the midpoint of each of these segments.
If a line makes equal angles with the opposite sides of a cyclic quadrilateral,
then circles can be drawn tangent to each pair, where this line meets them,
and these circles are coaxial with the original circle.
Given an angle and a circle through the vertex of the angle, cutting its
bisector at a fixed point. Then the sum of the intercepts of the circle on
the sides of the angle is invariant.
(Utkarshs Isogonal Line Lemma) AX and AY are isogonal wrt A. BX
meets CY in Z1 and BY meets CX in Z2 . then AZ1 , AZ2 are isogonal
wrt A.
Let 1 and 2 be two circles with the center of 1 lying on 2 . Then the
inverse of 1 with respect to 2 is their radical axis.
Here are some general tips and tricks which were found to be useful to the
author during Olympiads.
Create phantom points: This means creating a point which satisfies a
property that is to be proved and showing that it is unique and satisfies
the problem condition.
Negative inversion at H sending the nine-point circle to the circumcircle.
Inversion about the circumcircle.
Maximum irritating circles inversion: try to get rid of as many irritating
circles you can (this is of course based on your intuition).
Inversion about the incircle (quite useful for many problems, most of them
involving the contact triangle and (ABC)).
Inversion at A. This one sends the circumcenter to the reflection of A in
the line joining the inverses of B and C. Inversion at A is most useful (as
far as I think) in the following 2 cases:
2. The composition of an inversion with radius bc and flip over AI.
This is quite famous and preserves the original triangle and is incredibly powerful for overlays. It sends BC to the circumcircle of
ABC.
To show two circles are orthogonal, you may show that the inverse of one
circle in the other is itself, or try to show that the endpoints of a diameter
of a circle lie on the polars of one another with respect to the other circle.
To show that 2 circles are tangent, the following can be used:
1. Show that they are homothetic at a point lying on one of the circles,
usually done by finding 2 triangles homothetic at a point on one of
the circles, having their circumcircles as the given circles.
2. Or draw a tangent to the circle at an intersection point (after showing
that they intersect!) and then show that it is tangent to the other
circle too.
3. Or show that the distance between the centers is either the sum or
the difference of their radii.
Another useful trick worth mentioning is point circles. They are especially
useful for radical axes, because the radical axis of 2 point circles is their
perpendicular bisector, and the radical axis of a point circle P and a nonpoint circle is the P -midline of the triangle formed by P and the contact
points of the tangents from P to the circle.
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References