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Conway triangle notation

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In geometry, the Conway triangle notation, named after John Horton Conway,[1] allows trigonometric functions of a triangle to be managed algebraically. However, though the notation was promoted by Conway, a much earlier reference to the notation goes back to the Spanish nineteenth century mathematician gl:Juan Jacobo Durán Loriga.[2]

Given a reference triangle whose sides are a, b and c and whose corresponding internal angles are A, B, and C then the Conway triangle notation is simply represented as follows:

where S = 2 × area of reference triangle and

[3][4]

in particular

     where is the Brocard angle. The law of cosines is used: .
   for values of     where  

Furthermore the convention uses a shorthand notation for and

Hence:

Some important identities:

where R is the circumradius and abc = 2SR and where r is the incenter,      and  

Some useful trigonometric conversions:


Some useful formulas:

Some examples using Conway triangle notation:

Let D be the distance between two points P and Q whose trilinear coordinates are pa : pb : pc and qa : qb : qc. Let Kp = apa + bpb + cpc and let Kq = aqa + bqb + cqc. Then D is given by the formula:

[5]

Using this formula it is possible to determine OH, the distance between the circumcenter and the orthocenter as follows:

For the circumcenter pa = aSA and for the orthocenter qa = SBSC/a

Hence:

This gives:

[6]

References

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  1. ^ Chen, Evan (2016). Euclidean Geometry in Mathematical Olympiads. Mathematical Association of America. p. 132. ISBN 978-0883858394.
  2. ^ Loriga, Juan Jacobo Durán, "Nota sobre el triángulo", en El Progreso Matemático, tomo IV (1894), pages 313-316., Periodico de Matematicas Puras y Aplicadas.
  3. ^ Yiu, Paul (2002), "Notation." §3.4.1 in Introduction to the Geometry of the Triangle. pp. 33-34, Version 2.0402, April 2002 (PDF), Department of Mathematics Florida Atlantic University, pp. 33–34.
  4. ^ Kimberling, Clark, Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers - ETC, Part 1 "Introduced on November 1, 2011: Combos" Note 6, University of Evansville.
  5. ^ Yiu, Paul (2002), "The distance formula" §7.1 in Introduction to the Geometry of the Triangle. p. 87, Version 2.0402, April 2002 (PDF), Department of Mathematics Florida Atlantic University, p. 87.
  6. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Orthocenter §(14)". MathWorld.