A circle is a
shape consisting of all
points in a
plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the
centre. The distance between any point of the circle and the centre is called the
radius. The length of a line segment connecting two points on the circle and passing through the centre is called the
diameter. A circle bounds a region of the plane called a
disc.
The circle has been known since before the beginning of recorded history. Natural circles are common, such as the
full moon or a slice of round fruit. The circle is the basis for the
wheel, which, with related inventions such as
gears, makes much of modern machinery possible. In mathematics, the study of the circle has helped inspire the development of geometry,
astronomy and
calculus.
Terminology
Annulus: a ring-shaped object, the region bounded by two
concentric circles.
Arc: any
connected part of a circle. Specifying two end points of an arc and a centre allows for two arcs that together make up a full circle.
Centre: the point equidistant from all points on the circle.
Chord: a line segment whose endpoints lie on the circle, thus dividing a circle into two segments.
Circumference: the
length of one circuit along the circle, or the distance around the circle.
Diameter: a line segment whose endpoints lie on the circle and that passes through the centre; or the length of such a line segment. This is the largest distance between any two points on the circle. It is a special case of a chord, namely the longest chord for a given circle, and its length is twice the length of a radius.
Disc: the region of the plane bounded by a circle. In strict mathematical usage, a circle is only the boundary of the disc (or disk), while in everyday use the term "circle" may also refer to a disc.
Lens: the region common to (the intersection of) two overlapping discs.
Radius: a line segment joining the centre of a circle with any single point on the circle itself; or the length of such a segment, which is half (the length of) a diameter. Usually, the radius is denoted and required to be a positive number. A circle with is a
degenerate case consisting of a single point.
Sector: a region bounded by two radii of equal length with a common centre and either of the two possible arcs, determined by this centre and the endpoints of the radii.
Segment: a region bounded by a chord and one of the arcs connecting the chord's endpoints. The length of the chord imposes a lower boundary on the diameter of possible arcs. Sometimes the term segment is used only for regions not containing the centre of the circle to which their arc belongs.
Secant: an extended chord, a coplanar straight line, intersecting a circle in two points.
Semicircle: one of the two possible arcs determined by the endpoints of a diameter, taking its midpoint as centre. In non-technical common usage it may mean the interior of the two-dimensional region bounded by a diameter and one of its arcs, that is technically called a half-disc. A half-disc is a special case of a segment, namely the largest one.
Tangent: a coplanar straight line that has one single point in common with a circle ("touches the circle at this point").
All of the specified regions may be considered as open, that is, not containing their boundaries, or as closed, including their respective boundaries.
Etymology
The word circle derives from the
Greek κίρκος/κύκλος (kirkos/kuklos), itself a
metathesis of the
Homeric Greek κρίκος (krikos), meaning "hoop" or "ring".[1] The origins of the words circus and circuit are closely related.
The Egyptian
Rhind papyrus, dated to 1700 BCE, gives a method to find the area of a circle. The result corresponds to 256/81 (3.16049...) as an approximate value of
π.[3]
Book 3 of
Euclid's Elements deals with the properties of circles. Euclid's definition of a circle is:
A circle is a plane figure bounded by one curved line, and such that all straight lines drawn from a certain point within it to the bounding line, are equal. The bounding line is called its circumference and the point, its centre.
In
Plato's
Seventh Letter there is a detailed definition and explanation of the circle. Plato explains the perfect circle, and how it is different from any drawing, words, definition or explanation. Early
science, particularly
geometry and
astrology and astronomy, was connected to the divine for most
medieval scholars, and many believed that there was something intrinsically "divine" or "perfect" that could be found in circles.[5][6]
With the advent of
abstract art in the early 20th century, geometric objects became an artistic subject in their own right.
Wassily Kandinsky in particular often used circles as an element of his compositions.[8][9]
Symbolism and religious use
From the time of the earliest known civilisations – such as the Assyrians and ancient Egyptians, those in the Indus Valley and along the Yellow River in China, and the Western civilisations of ancient Greece and Rome during classical Antiquity – the circle has been used directly or indirectly in visual art to convey the artist's message and to express certain ideas.
However, differences in worldview (beliefs and culture) had a great impact on artists' perceptions. While some emphasised the circle's perimeter to demonstrate their democratic manifestation, others focused on its centre to symbolise the concept of cosmic unity. In mystical doctrines, the circle mainly symbolises the infinite and cyclical nature of existence, but in religious traditions it represents heavenly bodies and divine spirits.
The circle signifies many sacred and spiritual concepts, including unity, infinity, wholeness, the universe, divinity, balance, stability and perfection, among others. Such concepts have been conveyed in cultures worldwide through the use of symbols, for example, a compass, a halo, the vesica piscis and its derivatives (fish, eye, aureole, mandorla, etc.), the ouroboros, the
Dharma wheel, a rainbow, mandalas, rose windows and so forth.[10]Magic circles are part of some traditions of
Western esotericism.
The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter is π (pi), an
irrationalconstant approximately equal to 3.141592654. The ratio of a circle's circumference to its radius is 2π.[a] Thus the circumference C is related to the radius r and diameter d by:
As proved by
Archimedes, in his
Measurement of a Circle, the
area enclosed by a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference and whose height equals the circle's radius,[11] which comes to π multiplied by the radius squared:
Equivalently, denoting diameter by d,
that is, approximately 79% of the
circumscribing square (whose side is of length d).
The circle is the plane curve enclosing the maximum area for a given arc length. This relates the circle to a problem in the calculus of variations, namely the
isoperimetric inequality.
If a circle of radius r is centred at the
vertex of an
angle, and that angle intercepts an
arc of the circle with an
arc length of s, then the
radian measure 𝜃 of the angle is the ratio of the arc length to the radius:
The circular arc is said to
subtend the angle, known as the
central angle, at the centre of the circle. The angle subtended by a complete circle at its centre is a
complete angle, which measures 2π radians, 360
degrees, or one
turn.
Using radians, the formula for the arc length s of a circular arc of radius r and subtending a central angle of measure 𝜃 is
and the formula for the area A of a
circular sector of radius r and with central angle of measure 𝜃 is
In the special case 𝜃 = 2π, these formulae yield the circumference of a complete circle and area of a complete disc, respectively.
This
equation, known as the equation of the circle, follows from the
Pythagorean theorem applied to any point on the circle: as shown in the adjacent diagram, the radius is the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle whose other sides are of length |x − a| and |y − b|. If the circle is centred at the origin (0, 0), then the equation simplifies to
One coordinate as a function of the other
The circle of radius with center at in the – plane can be broken into two semicircles each of which is the
graph of a function, and , respectively:
for values of ranging from to .
Parametric form
The equation can be written in
parametric form using the
trigonometric functions sine and cosine as
where t is a
parametric variable in the range 0 to 2π, interpreted geometrically as the
angle that the ray from (a, b) to (x, y) makes with the positive x axis.
An alternative parametrisation of the circle is
In this parameterisation, the ratio of t to r can be interpreted geometrically as the
stereographic projection of the line passing through the centre parallel to the x axis (see
Tangent half-angle substitution). However, this parameterisation works only if t is made to range not only through all reals but also to a point at infinity; otherwise, the leftmost point of the circle would be omitted.
3-point form
The equation of the circle determined by three points not on a line is obtained by a conversion of the
3-point form of a circle equation:
It can be proven that a conic section is a circle exactly when it contains (when extended to the
complex projective plane) the points I(1: i: 0) and J(1: −i: 0). These points are called the
circular points at infinity.
where a is the radius of the circle, are the polar coordinates of a generic point on the circle, and are the polar coordinates of the centre of the circle (i.e., r0 is the distance from the origin to the centre of the circle, and φ is the anticlockwise angle from the positive x axis to the line connecting the origin to the centre of the circle). For a circle centred on the origin, i.e. r0 = 0, this reduces to r = a. When r0 = a, or when the origin lies on the circle, the equation becomes
In the general case, the equation can be solved for r, giving
Without the ± sign, the equation would in some cases describe only half a circle.
Complex plane
In the
complex plane, a circle with a centre at c and radius r has the equation
In parametric form, this can be written as
The slightly generalised equation
for real p, q and complex g is sometimes called a
generalised circle. This becomes the above equation for a circle with , since . Not all generalised circles are actually circles: a generalised circle is either a (true) circle or a
line.
The
tangent line through a point P on the circle is perpendicular to the diameter passing through P. If P = (x1, y1) and the circle has centre (a, b) and radius r, then the tangent line is perpendicular to the line from (a, b) to (x1, y1), so it has the form (x1 − a)x + (y1 – b)y = c. Evaluating at (x1, y1) determines the value of c, and the result is that the equation of the tangent is
or
Through any three points, not all on the same line, there lies a unique circle. In Cartesian coordinates, it is possible to give explicit formulae for the coordinates of the centre of the circle and the radius in terms of the coordinates of the three given points. See
circumcircle.
Chord
Chords are equidistant from the centre of a circle if and only if they are equal in length.
The
perpendicular bisector of a chord passes through the centre of a circle; equivalent statements stemming from the uniqueness of the perpendicular bisector are:
A perpendicular line from the centre of a circle bisects the chord.
If a central angle and an
inscribed angle of a circle are subtended by the same chord and on the same side of the chord, then the central angle is twice the inscribed angle.
If two angles are inscribed on the same chord and on the same side of the chord, then they are equal.
If two angles are inscribed on the same chord and on opposite sides of the chord, then they are
supplementary.
An inscribed angle subtended by a diameter is a right angle (see
Thales' theorem).
The diameter is the longest chord of the circle.
Among all the circles with a chord AB in common, the circle with minimal radius is the one with diameter AB.
If the
intersection of any two chords divides one chord into lengths a and b and divides the other chord into lengths c and d, then ab = cd.
If the intersection of any two perpendicular chords divides one chord into lengths a and b and divides the other chord into lengths c and d, then a2 + b2 + c2 + d2 equals the square of the diameter.[13]
The sum of the squared lengths of any two chords intersecting at right angles at a given point is the same as that of any other two perpendicular chords intersecting at the same point and is given by 8r2 − 4p2, where r is the circle radius, and p is the distance from the centre point to the point of intersection.[14]
The distance from a point on the circle to a given chord times the diameter of the circle equals the product of the distances from the point to the ends of the chord.[15]: p.71
Tangent
A line drawn perpendicular to a radius through the end point of the radius lying on the circle is a tangent to the circle.
A line drawn perpendicular to a tangent through the point of contact with a circle passes through the centre of the circle.
Two tangents can always be drawn to a circle from any point outside the circle, and these tangents are equal in length.
If a tangent at A and a tangent at B intersect at the exterior point P, then denoting the centre as O, the angles ∠BOA and ∠BPA are supplementary.
If AD is tangent to the circle at A and if AQ is a chord of the circle, then ∠DAQ = 1/2arc(AQ).
The chord theorem states that if two chords, CD and EB, intersect at A, then AC × AD = AB × AE.
If two secants, AE and AD, also cut the circle at B and C respectively, then AC × AD = AB × AE (corollary of the chord theorem).
A tangent can be considered a limiting case of a secant whose ends are coincident. If a tangent from an external point A meets the circle at F and a secant from the external point A meets the circle at C and D respectively, then AF2 = AC × AD (tangent–secant theorem).
The angle between a chord and the tangent at one of its endpoints is equal to one half the angle subtended at the centre of the circle, on the opposite side of the chord (tangent chord angle).
If the angle subtended by the chord at the centre is 90
°, then ℓ = r √2, where ℓ is the length of the chord, and r is the radius of the circle.
If two secants are inscribed in the circle as shown at right, then the measurement of angle A is equal to one half the difference of the measurements of the enclosed arcs ( and ). That is, , where O is the centre of the circle (secant–secant theorem).
An inscribed angle (examples are the blue and green angles in the figure) is exactly half the corresponding
central angle (red). Hence, all inscribed angles that subtend the same arc (pink) are equal. Angles inscribed on the arc (brown) are supplementary. In particular, every inscribed angle that subtends a diameter is a
right angle (since the central angle is 180°).
Sagitta
The
sagitta (also known as the
versine) is a line segment drawn perpendicular to a chord, between the midpoint of that chord and the arc of the circle.
Given the length y of a chord and the length x of the sagitta, the Pythagorean theorem can be used to calculate the radius of the unique circle that will fit around the two lines:
Another proof of this result, which relies only on two chord properties given above, is as follows. Given a chord of length y and with sagitta of length x, since the sagitta intersects the midpoint of the chord, we know that it is a part of a diameter of the circle. Since the diameter is twice the radius, the "missing" part of the diameter is (2r − x) in length. Using the fact that one part of one chord times the other part is equal to the same product taken along a chord intersecting the first chord, we find that (2r − x)x = (y / 2)2. Solving for r, we find the required result.
The simplest and most basic is the construction given the centre of the circle and a point on the circle. Place the fixed leg of the
compass on the centre point, the movable leg on the point on the circle and rotate the compass.
Apollonius of Perga showed that a circle may also be defined as the set of points in a plane having a constant ratio (other than 1) of distances to two fixed foci, A and B.[16][17] (The set of points where the distances are equal is the perpendicular bisector of segment AB, a line.) That circle is sometimes said to be drawn about two points.
The proof is in two parts. First, one must prove that, given two foci A and B and a ratio of distances, any point P satisfying the ratio of distances must fall on a particular circle. Let C be another point, also satisfying the ratio and lying on segment AB. By the
angle bisector theorem the line segment PC will bisect the
interior angleAPB, since the segments are similar:
Analogously, a line segment PD through some point D on AB extended bisects the corresponding exterior angle BPQ where Q is on AP extended. Since the interior and exterior angles sum to 180 degrees, the angle CPD is exactly 90 degrees; that is, a right angle. The set of points P such that angle CPD is a right angle forms a circle, of which CD is a diameter.
Second, see[18]: 15 for a proof that every point on the indicated circle satisfies the given ratio.
Cross-ratios
A closely related property of circles involves the geometry of the
cross-ratio of points in the complex plane. If A, B, and C are as above, then the circle of Apollonius for these three points is the collection of points P for which the absolute value of the cross-ratio is equal to one:
Stated another way, P is a point on the circle of Apollonius if and only if the cross-ratio A, B; C, P is on the unit circle in the complex plane.
If C is the midpoint of the segment AB, then the collection of points P satisfying the Apollonius condition
is not a circle, but rather a line.
Thus, if A, B, and C are given distinct points in the plane, then the
locus of points P satisfying the above equation is called a "generalised circle." It may either be a true circle or a line. In this sense a line is a generalised circle of infinite radius.
Inscription in or circumscription about other figures
In every
triangle a unique circle, called the
incircle, can be inscribed such that it is tangent to each of the three sides of the triangle.[19]
About every triangle a unique circle, called the circumcircle, can be circumscribed such that it goes through each of the triangle's three
vertices.[20]
A
cyclic polygon is any convex polygon about which a
circle can be circumscribed, passing through each vertex. A well-studied example is the cyclic quadrilateral. Every regular polygon and every triangle is a cyclic polygon. A polygon that is both cyclic and tangential is called a
bicentric polygon.
A
hypocycloid is a curve that is inscribed in a given circle by tracing a fixed point on a smaller circle that rolls within and tangent to the given circle.
Limiting case of other figures
The circle can be viewed as a
limiting case of various other figures:
A
Cartesian oval is a set of points such that a
weighted sum of the distances from any of its points to two fixed points (foci) is a constant. An
ellipse is the case in which the weights are equal. A circle is an ellipse with an eccentricity of zero, meaning that the two foci coincide with each other as the centre of the circle. A circle is also a different special case of a Cartesian oval in which one of the weights is zero.
A
superellipse has an equation of the form for positive a, b, and n. A supercircle has b = a. A circle is the special case of a supercircle in which n = 2.
A
Cassini oval is a set of points such that the product of the distances from any of its points to two fixed points is a constant. When the two fixed points coincide, a circle results.
A
curve of constant width is a figure whose width, defined as the perpendicular distance between two distinct parallel lines each intersecting its boundary in a single point, is the same regardless of the direction of those two parallel lines. The circle is the simplest example of this type of figure.
Locus of constant sum
Consider a finite set of points in the plane. The locus of points such that the sum of the squares of the distances to the given points is constant is a circle, whose centre is at the centroid of the given points.[22]
A generalisation for higher powers of distances is obtained if under points the vertices of the regular polygon are taken.[23] The locus of points such that the sum of the -th power of distances to the vertices of a given regular polygon with circumradius is constant is a circle, if
whose centre is the centroid of the .
In the case of the
equilateral triangle, the loci of the constant sums of the second and fourth powers are circles, whereas for the square, the loci are circles for the constant sums of the second, fourth, and sixth powers. For the
regular pentagon the constant sum of the eighth powers of the distances will be added and so forth.
Squaring the circle is the problem, proposed by
ancientgeometers, of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle by using only a finite number of steps with
compass and straightedge.
Defining a circle as the set of points with a fixed distance from a point, different shapes can be considered circles under different definitions of distance. In
p-norm, distance is determined by
In Euclidean geometry, p = 2, giving the familiar
In
taxicab geometry, p = 1. Taxicab circles are
squares with sides oriented at a 45° angle to the coordinate axes. While each side would have length using a
Euclidean metric, where r is the circle's radius, its length in taxicab geometry is 2r. Thus, a circle's circumference is 8r. Thus, the value of a geometric analog to is 4 in this geometry. The formula for the unit circle in taxicab geometry is in Cartesian coordinates and
in polar coordinates.
A circle of radius r for the
Chebyshev distance (
L∞ metric) on a plane is also a square with side length 2r parallel to the coordinate axes, so planar Chebyshev distance can be viewed as equivalent by rotation and scaling to planar taxicab distance. However, this equivalence between L1 and L∞ metrics does not generalise to higher dimensions.
In
topology, a circle is not limited to the geometric concept, but to all of its
homeomorphisms. Two topological circles are equivalent if one can be transformed into the other via a deformation of
R3 upon itself (known as an
ambient isotopy).[24]
^Abdullahi, Yahya (29 October 2019). "The Circle from East to West". In Charnier, Jean-François (ed.). The Louvre Abu Dhabi: A World Vision of Art. Rizzoli International Publications, Incorporated.
ISBN9782370741004.