Circle Inversion
In geometry, an inversion is a particular type of transformation that maps all circles into circles, where by a circle one may also mean a line (a circle with infinite radius).
Circle inversion
Inverse of a point
P ' is the inverse of P with respect to the circle.
In the plane, the inverse of a point P in respect to a circle of center O and radius R is a point P' such that P and P' are on the same ray going from O, and OP times OP ' equals the radius squared,

This circle in respect to which inversion is performed will be called the reference circle.
The inverse in respect to the red circle of a circle going through O (blue), is a line not going through O (green), and vice-versa.
The inverse in respect to the red circle of a circle not going through O (blue), is a circle not going through O (green), and vice-versa.
A procedure to construct the inverse P' of a point P outside a circle C. Let r be the radius of C. Since the triangles OPN and OP'N are similar, OP is to r as r is to OP'.
It follows from the definition that the inverse of a point inside
the reference circle is outside the reference circle and vice-versa. A
point on the circle stays in the same place under inversion. The center
of the circle gets transformed to the point at infinity,
which is transformed back to the center of the circle. In summary, the
closer a point is to the center, the further away its transformation
is, and vise-versa. This inversive relationship between points P and P' is the reasoning for this transformation's name.
Properties
One may invert a set of points in respect to a circle by inverting
each of the points which make it up. The following properties is what
makes circle inversion important.
- A line not passing through the center of the reference circle is
inverted into a circle passing through the center of the reference
circle, and vice versa; whereas a line passing through the center of
the reference circle is inverted into itself.
- A circle not passing through the center of the reference circle is
inverted into a circle not passing through the center of the reference
circle. The circle (or line) after inversion stays as before if and
only if it is orthogonal to the reference circle at their points of intersection.
Application
Note that the center of a circle being inverted and the center of
the circle as result of inversion are collinear with the center of the
reference circle. This fact could be useful in proving the Euler line of the intouch triangle of a triangle coincides with its OI line. The proof roughly goes as below:
Invert with respect to the incircle of triangle ABC. The medial triangle of the intouch triangle is inverted into triangle ABC,
meaning the circumcenter of the medial triangle, that is, the
nine-point center of the intouch triangle, the incenter and
circumcenter of triangle ABC are collinear.
In addition, two dimensional inversion can be extended to 3-dimensional by making use of a sphere instead.
Inversions in three dimensions
Circle inversion is generalizable to sphere inversion in three dimensions. The inversion of a point P in 3D with respect to a reference sphere centered at a point O with radius R is a point P' such that and the points P and P' are on the same ray going from O.
As with the 2D version, a sphere inverts to a sphere, except that if a sphere passes through the center O of the reference sphere, then it inverts to a plane. Any plane not passing through O, inverts to a sphere touching at O.
Stereographic projection is a special case of sphere inversion. Indeed, consider a sphere B of radius 1 and a plane P touching B at the South Pole S of B. Then P is the stereographic projection of B in respect to the North Pole N of B. Consider a sphere B2 of radius 2 centered at N. The inversion in respect to B2 transforms B into its stereographic projection P.
The Erlangen program
In the spirit of the Erlangen program, inversive geometry is the study of transformations generated by the Euclidean transformations together with inversions, which in coordinate form, basically are conjugate to

where r is the radius of the inversion.
In 2 dimensions, with r = 1, this is circle inversion with respect to the unit circle. In the complex plane this corresponds to taking the reciprocal of the conjugate.
As said, in inversive geometry there is no distinction made between a straight line and a circle (or hyperplane and hypersphere): a line is just nothing more and nothing less than a circle in its particular embedding in a Euclidean geometry (with a point added at infinity) and one can always be transformed into another.
Inversion of an algebraic curve
We may invert a plane algebraic curve given by a single polynomial equation f(x, y) = 0 by setting

Clearing denominators, we have the polynomial equations ux2 + uy2 − x = 0,vx2 + vy2 − y = 0,
and eliminating x and y from the system of three equations in four
unknowns consisting of these two equations and f (for instance, by
using resultants) we can readily find the equation of the curve inverted in the unit circle. Now and applying the transformation again leads back to the original curve.
For example, applying the above transformation to the lemniscate
- (x2 + y2)2 = a2(x2 − y2)
gives us
- a2(u2 − v2) = 1,
the equation of a hyperbola; since inversion is a birational
transformation and the hyperbola is a rational curve, this shows the
lemniscate is also a rational curve, which is to say a curve of genus zero. If we apply it to the Fermat curve xn + yn = 1, where n is odd, we obtain
- (u2 + v2)n = un + vn.
Any rational point on the Fermat curve has a corresponding rational point on this curve, giving an equivalent formulation of Fermat's Last Theorem.
Anticonformal mapping property
The circle inversion map is anticonformal, which means that at every
point it preserves angles and reverses orientation (a map is called conformal if it preserves oriented angles) . Algebraically, a map is anticonformal if at every point the Jacobian is a scalar times an orthogonal matrix
with negative determinant: in two dimensions the Jacobian must be a
scalar times a reflection at every point. This means that if J is the Jacobian, then and Computing the Jacobian in the case zi = xi/||x||2, where ||x||2 = x12 + ... + xn2 gives JJT = kI, with k = 1/||x||4, and additionally det(J) is negative; hence the inversive map is anticonformal.
In the complex plane, the most obvious circle inversion map (i.e.,
using the unit circle centered at the origin) is the complex conjugate
of the complex inverse map taking z to 1/z. The complex analytic
inverse map is conformal and its conjugate, circle inversion, is
anticonformal.
Inversive geometry and hyperbolic geometry
The (n − 1)-sphere with equation

will have a positive radius so long as a12 + ... + an2 is greater than c, and on inversion gives the sphere

Hence, it will be invariant under inversion if and only if c = 1. But this is the condition of being orthogonal to the unit sphere. Hence we are led to consider the (n − 1)-spheres with equation

which are invariant under inversion, orthogonal to the unit sphere,
and have centers outside of the sphere. These together with the
subspace hyperplanes separating hemispheres are the hypersurfaces of
the Poincaré disc model of hyperbolic geometry.
Since inversion in the unit sphere leaves the spheres orthogonal to
it invariant, the inversion maps the points inside the unit sphere to
the outside and vice-versa. This is therefore true in general of
orthogonal spheres, and in particular inversion in one of the spheres
orthogonal to the unit sphere maps the unit sphere to itself. It also
maps the interior of the unit sphere to itself, with points outside the
orthogonal sphere mapping inside, and vice-versa; this defines the
reflections of the Poincaré disc model if we also include with them the
reflections through the diameters separating hemispheres of the unit
sphere. These reflections generate the group of isometries of the
model, which tells us that the isometries are conformal. Hence, the
angle between two curves in the model is the same as the angle between
two curves in the hyperbolic space.
References
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Inversion (geometry)"
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