In geometry, the director circle of an ellipse or hyperbola (also called the orthoptic circle or Fermat–Apollonius circle) is a circle consisting of all points where two perpendicular tangent lines to the ellipse or hyperbola cross each other.
The director circle of an ellipse circumscribes the minimum bounding box of the ellipse. It has the same center as the ellipse, with radius , where
a
b
The director circle of a hyperbola has radius , and so, may not exist in the Euclidean plane, but could be a circle with imaginary radius in the complex plane.
The director circle of a circle is a concentric circle having radius times the radius of the original circle.
More generally, for any collection of points, weights, and constant, one can define a circle as the locus of points such that
The director circle of an ellipse is a special case of this more general construction with two points and at the foci of the ellipse, weights, and equal to the square of the major axis of the ellipse. The Apollonius circle, the locus of points such that the ratio of distances of to two foci and is a fixed constant, is another special case, with,, and .
In the case of a parabola the director circle degenerates to a straight line, the directrix of the parabola.