In geometry, the Soddy circles of a triangle are two circles associated with any triangle in the plane. Their centers are the Soddy centers of the triangle. They are all named for Frederick Soddy, who rediscovered Descartes' theorem on the radii of mutually tangent quadruples of circles.
Any triangle has three externally tangent circles centered at its vertices. Two more circles, its Soddy circles, are tangent to the three circles centered at the vertices; their centers are called Soddy centers. The line through the Soddy centers is the Soddy line of the triangle. These circles are related to many other notable features of the triangle. They can be generalized to additional triples of tangent circles centered at the vertices in which one circle surrounds the other two.
Let
A,B,C
a,b,c
A,B,C
s-a,s-b,s-c
Each of the three circles centered at the vertices crosses two sides of the triangle at right angles, at one of the three intouch points of the triangle, where its incircle is tangent to the side. The two circles tangent to these three circles are separated by the incircle, one interior to it and one exterior. The Soddy centers lie at the common intersections of three hyperbolas, each having two triangle vertices as foci and passing through the third vertex.
The inner Soddy center is an equal detour point: the polyline connecting any two triangle vertices through the inner Soddy point is longer than the line segment connecting those vertices directly, by an amount that does not depend on which two vertices are chosen. By Descartes' theorem, the inner Soddy circle's curvature is , where
\Delta
R
r
As well as the three externally tangent circles formed from a triangle, three more triples of tangent circles also have their centers at the triangle vertices, but with one of the circles surrounding the other two. Their triples of radii are
(-s,s-c,s-b),
(s-c,-s,s-a),
(s-b,s-a,-s),
See main article: Soddy line.
The line through both Soddy centers, called the Soddy line, also passes through the incenter of the triangle, which is the homothetic center of the two Soddy circles, and through the Gergonne point, the intersection of the three lines connecting the intouch points of the triangle to the opposite vertices. Four mutually tangent circles define six points of tangency, which can be grouped in three pairs of tangent points, each pair coming from two disjoint pairs of circles. The three lines through these three pairs of tangent points are concurrent, and the points of concurrency defined in this way from the inner and outer circles define two more triangle centers called the Eppstein points that also lie on the Soddy line.
The three additional pairs of excentric Soddy circles each are associated with a Soddy line through their centers. Each passes through the corresponding excenter of the triangle, which is the center of similitude for the two circles. Each Soddy line also passes through an analog of the Gergonne point and the Eppstein points. The four Soddy lines concur at the de Longchamps point, the reflection of the orthocenter of the triangle about the circumcenter.