ON THE PROBLEM OF THE IN-AND-CIRCUMSCRIBED
TRIANGLE.
[From the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. clxi. (for the
year 1871), pp. 369—412. Received December 30, 1870,—Read February 9, 1871.]
The problem of the In-and-Circumscribed Triangle is a particular case of that of
the In-and-Circumscribed Polygon: the last-mentioned problem may be thus stated—to
find a polygon such that the angles are situate in and the sides touch a given curve
or curves. And we may in the first instance inquire as to the number of such
polygons. In the case where the curves containing the angles and touched by the
sides respectively are all of them distinct curves, the number of polygons is obtained
very easily and has a simple expression: it is equal to twice the product of the
orders of the curves containing the several angles respectively into the product of the
classes of the curves touched by the several sides respectively; or, say, it is equal to
twice the product of the orders of the angle-curves into the product of the classes of
the side-curves. But when several of the curves become one and the same curve,
and in particular when the angles are all of them situate in and the sides all touch
one and the same curve, it is a much more difficult problem to find the number of
polygons. The solution of this problem when the polygon is a triangle, and for all
the different relations of identity between the different curves, is the object of the
present memoir, which is accordingly entitled “ On the Problem of the In-and-Circum
scribed Triangle; ” the methods and principles, however, are applicable to the case of
a polygon of any number of sides, the method chiefly made use of being that furnished
by the theory of correspondence, as will be explained. The results (for the triangle)
are given in the following Table; for the explanation of which I remark that the
triangle is taken to be aBcDeF; viz. a, c, e are the angles, B, D, F the sides; that
is, B, D, F are the sides ac, ce, ea respectively, and a, c, e are the angles FB, BD, DF