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The point of concurrence of the Symmedian Lines, sometimes also called the Symmedian
Point and Grebe Point.
Let be the Centroid of a Triangle
,
,
, and
the Angle Bisectors of Angles
,
,
, and
,
, and
the reflections of
,
, and
about
,
, and
. Then
is the point of concurrence of the lines
,
, and
. It is the perspectivity center of a Triangle and its Tangential Triangle.
In Areal Coordinates (actual Trilinear Coordinates), the Lemoine point is the point for which
is a minimum. A center
is the
Centroid of its own
Pedal Triangle Iff it is the Lemoine point.
The Lemoine point lies on the Brocard Axis, and its distances from the Lemoine point to the sides of the
Triangle are
See also Angle Bisector, Brocard Angle, Brocard Axis, Brocard Diameter, Centroid (Triangle), Cosymmedian Triangles, Grebe Point, Isogonal Conjugate, Lemoine Circle, Lemoine Line, Line at Infinity, Mittenpunkt, Pedal Triangle, Steiner Points, Symmedian Line, Tangential Triangle
References
Gallatly, W. The Modern Geometry of the Triangle, 2nd ed. London: Hodgson, p. 86, 1913.
Honsberger, R. Episodes in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Euclidean Geometry.
Washington, DC: Math. Assoc. Amer., 1995.
Johnson, R. A. Modern Geometry: An Elementary Treatise on the Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle. Boston, MA:
Houghton Mifflin, pp. 217, 268-269, and 271-272, 1929.
Kimberling, C. ``Central Points and Central Lines in the Plane of a Triangle.'' Math. Mag. 67, 163-187, 1994.
Kimberling, C. ``Symmedian Point.''
http://cedar.evansville.edu/~ck6/tcenters/class/sympt.html.
Mackay, J. S. ``Early History of the Symmedian Point.'' Proc. Edinburgh Math. Soc. 11, 92-103, 1892-1893.
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein