Perpendicular bisector construction of a quadrilateral

In geometry, the perpendicular bisector construction of a quadrilateral is a construction which produces a new quadrilateral from a given quadrilateral using the perpendicular bisectors to the sides of the former quadrilateral. This construction arises naturally in an attempt to find a replacement for the circumcenter of a quadrilateral in the case that is non-cyclic.

Definition of the construction

Suppose that the vertices of the quadrilateral  Q are given by  Q_1,Q_2,Q_3,Q_4  . Let  b_1,b_2,b_3,b_4 be the perpendicular bisectors of sides  Q_1Q_2,Q_2Q_3,Q_3Q_4,Q_4Q_1 respectively. Then their intersections  Q_i^{(2)}=b_{i+2}b_{i+3} , with subscripts considered modulo 4, form the consequent quadrilateral  Q^{(2)} . The construction is then iterated on  Q^{(2)} to produce  Q^{(3)} and so on.

First iteration of the perpendicular bisector construction

An equivalent construction can be obtained by letting the vertices of  Q^{(i+1)} be the circumcenters of the 4 triangles formed by selecting combinations of 3 vertices of  Q^{(i)} .

Properties

1. If  Q^{(1)} is not cyclic, then  Q^{(2)} is not degenerate.[1]

2. Quadrilateral  Q^{(2)} is never cyclic.[1] Combining #1 and #2,  Q^{(3)} is always nondegenrate.

3. Quadrilaterals  Q^{(1)} and  Q^{(3)} are homothetic, and in particular, similar.[2] Quadrilaterals  Q^{(2)} and  Q^{(4)} are also homothetic.

3. The perpendicular bisector construction can be reversed via isogonal conjugation.[3] That is, given  Q^{(i+1)} , it is possible to construct  Q^{(i)} .

4. Let  \alpha, \beta, \gamma, \delta be the angles of  Q^{(1)} . For every  i , the ratio of areas of  Q^{(i)} and  Q^{(i+1)} is given by[3]

 (1/4)(\cot(\alpha)+\cot(\gamma))(\cot(\beta)+\cot(\delta)).

5. If  Q^{(1)} is convex then the sequence of quadrilaterals  Q^{(1)}, Q^{(2)},\ldots converges to the isoptic point of  Q^{(1)} , which is also the isoptic point for every  Q^{(i)} . Similarly, if  Q^{(1)} is concave, then the sequence  Q^{(1)}, Q^{(0)}, Q^{(-1)},\ldots obtained by reversing the construction converges to the Isoptic Point of the  Q^{(i)} 's.[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 J. King, Quadrilaterals formed by perpendicular bisectors, in Geometry Turned On, (ed. J. King), MAA Notes 41, 1997, pp. 29–32.
  2. G. C. Shephard, The perpendicular bisector construction, Geom. Dedicata, 56 (1995) 75–84.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 O. Radko and E. Tsukerman, The Perpendicular Bisector Construction, the Isoptic Point and the Simson Line of a Quadrilateral, Forum Geometricorum 12: 161–189 (2012).
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