In geometry, the trilinear coordinates x : y : z of a point relative to a given triangle describe the relative directed distances from the three sidelines of the triangle. Trilinear coordinates are an example of homogeneous coordinates. The ratio x : y is the ratio of the perpendicular distances from the point to the sides (extended if necessary) opposite vertices A and B respectively; the ratio y : z is the ratio of the perpendicular distances from the point to the sidelines opposite vertices B and C respectively; and likewise for z : x and vertices C and A.

In the diagram at right, the trilinear coordinates of the indicated interior point are the actual distances (a', b', c'), or equivalently in ratio form, ka' : kb' : kc' for any positive constant k. If a point is on a sideline of the reference triangle, its corresponding trilinear coordinate is 0. If an exterior point is on the opposite side of a sideline from the interior of the triangle, its trilinear coordinate associated with that sideline is negative. It is impossible for all three trilinear coordinates to be non-positive.

Notation

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The ratio notation   for trilinear coordinates is often used in preference to the ordered triple notation   with the latter reserved for triples of directed distances   relative to a specific triangle. The trilinear coordinates   can be rescaled by any arbitrary value without affecting their ratio. The bracketed, comma-separated triple notation   can cause confusion because conventionally this represents a different triple than e.g.   but these equivalent ratios    represent the same point.

Examples

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The trilinear coordinates of the incenter of a triangle ABC are 1 : 1 : 1; that is, the (directed) distances from the incenter to the sidelines BC, CA, AB are proportional to the actual distances denoted by (r, r, r), where r is the inradius of ABC. Given side lengths a, b, c we have:

Name; Symbol Trilinear coordinates Description
Vertices A   Points at the corners of the triangle
B  
C  
Incenter I   Intersection of the internal angle bisectors; Center of the triangle's inscribed circle
Excenters IA   Intersections of the angle bisectors (two external, one internal); Centers of the triangle's three escribed circles
IB  
IC  
Centroid G   Intersection of the medians; Center of mass of a uniform triangular lamina
Circumcenter O   Intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of the sides; Center of the triangle's circumscribed circle
Orthocenter H   Intersection of the altitudes
Nine-point center N   Center of the circle passing through the midpoint of each side, the foot of each altitude, and the midpoint between the orthocenter and each vertex
Symmedian point K   Intersection of the symmedians – the reflection of each median about the corresponding angle bisector

Note that, in general, the incenter is not the same as the centroid; the centroid has barycentric coordinates 1 : 1 : 1 (these being proportional to actual signed areas of the triangles BGC, △CGA, △AGB, where G = centroid.)

The midpoint of, for example, side BC has trilinear coordinates in actual sideline distances   for triangle area Δ, which in arbitrarily specified relative distances simplifies to 0 : ca : ab. The coordinates in actual sideline distances of the foot of the altitude from A to BC are   which in purely relative distances simplifies to 0 : cos C : cos B.[1]: p. 96 

Formulas

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Collinearities and concurrencies

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Trilinear coordinates enable many algebraic methods in triangle geometry. For example, three points

 

are collinear if and only if the determinant

 

equals zero. Thus if x : y : z is a variable point, the equation of a line through the points P and U is D = 0.[1]: p. 23  From this, every straight line has a linear equation homogeneous in x, y, z. Every equation of the form   in real coefficients is a real straight line of finite points unless l : m : n is proportional to a : b : c, the side lengths, in which case we have the locus of points at infinity.[1]: p. 40 

The dual of this proposition is that the lines

 

concur in a point (α, β, γ) if and only if D = 0.[1]: p. 28 

Also, if the actual directed distances are used when evaluating the determinant of D, then the area of triangle PUX is KD, where   (and where Δ is the area of triangle ABC, as above) if triangle PUX has the same orientation (clockwise or counterclockwise) as ABC, and   otherwise.

Parallel lines

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Two lines with trilinear equations   and   are parallel if and only if[1]: p. 98, #xi 

 

where a, b, c are the side lengths.

Angle between two lines

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The tangents of the angles between two lines with trilinear equations   and   are given by[1]: p.50 

 

Perpendicular lines

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Thus two lines with trilinear equations   and   are perpendicular if and only if

 

Altitude

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The equation of the altitude from vertex A to side BC is[1]: p.98, #x 

 

Line in terms of distances from vertices

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The equation of a line with variable distances p, q, r from the vertices A, B, C whose opposite sides are a, b, c is[1]: p. 97, #viii 

 

Actual-distance trilinear coordinates

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The trilinears with the coordinate values a', b', c' being the actual perpendicular distances to the sides satisfy[1]: p. 11 

 

for triangle sides a, b, c and area Δ. This can be seen in the figure at the top of this article, with interior point P partitioning triangle ABC into three triangles PBC, △PCA, △PAB with respective areas  

Distance between two points

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The distance d between two points with actual-distance trilinears ai : bi : ci is given by[1]: p. 46 

 

or in a more symmetric way

 

Distance from a point to a line

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The distance d from a point a' : b' : c' , in trilinear coordinates of actual distances, to a straight line   is[1]: p. 48 

 

Quadratic curves

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The equation of a conic section in the variable trilinear point x : y : z is[1]: p.118 

 

It has no linear terms and no constant term.

The equation of a circle of radius r having center at actual-distance coordinates (a', b', c' ) is[1]: p.287 

 

Circumconics

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The equation in trilinear coordinates x, y, z of any circumconic of a triangle is[1]: p. 192 

 

If the parameters l, m, n respectively equal the side lengths a, b, c (or the sines of the angles opposite them) then the equation gives the circumcircle.[1]: p. 199 

Each distinct circumconic has a center unique to itself. The equation in trilinear coordinates of the circumconic with center x' : y' : z' is[1]: p. 203 

 

Inconics

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Every conic section inscribed in a triangle has an equation in trilinear coordinates:[1]: p. 208 

 

with exactly one or three of the unspecified signs being negative.

The equation of the incircle can be simplified to[1]: p. 210, p.214 

 

while the equation for, for example, the excircle adjacent to the side segment opposite vertex A can be written as[1]: p. 215 

 

Cubic curves

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Many cubic curves are easily represented using trilinear coordinates. For example, the pivotal self-isoconjugate cubic Z(U, P), as the locus of a point X such that the P-isoconjugate of X is on the line UX is given by the determinant equation

 

Among named cubics Z(U, P) are the following:

Thomson cubic:  , where   is centroid and   is incenter
Feuerbach cubic:  , where   is Feuerbach point
Darboux cubic:  , where   is De Longchamps point
Neuberg cubic:  , where   is Euler infinity point.

Conversions

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Between trilinear coordinates and distances from sidelines

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For any choice of trilinear coordinates x : y : z to locate a point, the actual distances of the point from the sidelines are given by a' = kx, b' = ky, c' = kz where k can be determined by the formula   in which a, b, c are the respective sidelengths BC, CA, AB, and is the area of ABC.

Between barycentric and trilinear coordinates

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A point with trilinear coordinates x : y : z has barycentric coordinates ax : by : cz where a, b, c are the sidelengths of the triangle. Conversely, a point with barycentrics α : β : γ has trilinear coordinates  

Between Cartesian and trilinear coordinates

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Given a reference triangle ABC, express the position of the vertex B in terms of an ordered pair of Cartesian coordinates and represent this algebraically as a vector   using vertex C as the origin. Similarly define the position vector of vertex A as   Then any point P associated with the reference triangle ABC can be defined in a Cartesian system as a vector   If this point P has trilinear coordinates x : y : z then the conversion formula from the coefficients k1 and k2 in the Cartesian representation to the trilinear coordinates is, for side lengths a, b, c opposite vertices A, B, C,

 

and the conversion formula from the trilinear coordinates to the coefficients in the Cartesian representation is

 

More generally, if an arbitrary origin is chosen where the Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are known and represented by the vectors   and if the point P has trilinear coordinates x : y : z, then the Cartesian coordinates of   are the weighted average of the Cartesian coordinates of these vertices using the barycentric coordinates ax, by, cz as the weights. Hence the conversion formula from the trilinear coordinates x, y, z to the vector of Cartesian coordinates   of the point is given by

 

where the side lengths are

 

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s William Allen Whitworth (1866) Trilinear Coordinates and Other Methods of Analytical Geometry of Two Dimensions: an elementary treatise, link from Cornell University Historical Math Monographs.
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  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Trilinear Coordinates". MathWorld.
  • Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers - ETC by Clark Kimberling; has trilinear coordinates (and barycentric) for 64000 triangle centers.