Inversions with respect to an inverse circle

Inversions are applications defined in the plane except one point.

Given a circle k with radius r and center O and a point A different from the center of the circle, we define inversion with respect to from A as the point A' which lies in the ray OA satisfying OA.OA = r2.

We call A' the inverse of A with respect to k.
We call O the center of the inversion.



Some properties of the inversions:

In Hyperbolic Workshop.pdf (in Catalan, pages 21-28) the proof of these properties is given together with some other properties. It is also explained how the inversion point can be found.

In inversions.gsp you can find a macro that allows to plot the inverse point with respect to a circle. To construct this macro were necessary to distinguish two cases since the point can be in the interior or in the exterior of the circle.

Relation with the transformations of the hyperbolic plane:

In the Half-Plane Model, the transformations are composition of inversions with respect to hyperbolic lines. These hyperbolic lines are euclidean semicircles with center in the boundary line. From the properties listed below it can be proved that these inversions are isometries of the Half-Plane Model of the hyperbolic geometry, that's to say, they preserve distances and angles. They preserve the angles since they preserve the euclidean angles and the Half-Plane Model is conformal with the Euclidean Plane.


Hyperbolic geometry
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