Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Hyperbolic triangle





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





Inhyperbolic geometry, a hyperbolic triangle is a triangle in the hyperbolic plane. It consists of three line segments called sidesoredges and three points called anglesorvertices.

A hyperbolic triangle embedded in a saddle-shaped surface

Just as in the Euclidean case, three points of a hyperbolic space of an arbitrary dimension always lie on the same plane. Hence planar hyperbolic triangles also describe triangles possible in any higher dimension of hyperbolic spaces.

Anorder-7 triangular tiling has equilateral triangles with 2π/7 radian internal angles.

Definition

edit

A hyperbolic triangle consists of three non-collinear points and the three segments between them.[1]

Properties

edit

Hyperbolic triangles have some properties that are analogous to those of trianglesinEuclidean geometry:

Hyperbolic triangles have some properties that are analogous to those of triangles in sphericalorelliptic geometry:

Hyperbolic triangles have some properties that are the opposite of the properties of triangles in spherical or elliptic geometry:

Hyperbolic triangles also have some properties that are not found in other geometries:

Triangles with ideal vertices

edit
 
Three ideal triangles in the Poincaré disk model

The definition of a triangle can be generalized, permitting vertices on the ideal boundary of the plane while keeping the sides within the plane. If a pair of sides is limiting parallel (i.e. the distance between them approaches zero as they tend to the ideal point, but they do not intersect), then they end at an ideal vertex represented as an omega point.

Such a pair of sides may also be said to form an angle of zero.

A triangle with a zero angle is impossible in Euclidean geometry for straight sides lying on distinct lines. However, such zero angles are possible with tangent circles.

A triangle with one ideal vertex is called an omega triangle.

Special Triangles with ideal vertices are:

Triangle of parallelism

edit

A triangle where one vertex is an ideal point, one angle is right: the third angle is the angle of parallelism for the length of the side between the right and the third angle.

Schweikart triangle

edit

The triangle where two vertices are ideal points and the remaining angle is right, one of the first hyperbolic triangles (1818) described by Ferdinand Karl Schweikart.

Ideal triangle

edit

The triangle where all vertices are ideal points, an ideal triangle is the largest possible triangle in hyperbolic geometry because of the zero sum of the angles.

Standardized Gaussian curvature

edit

The relations among the angles and sides are analogous to those of spherical trigonometry; the length scale for both spherical geometry and hyperbolic geometry can for example be defined as the length of a side of an equilateral triangle with fixed angles.

The length scale is most convenient if the lengths are measured in terms of the absolute length (a special unit of length analogous to a relations between distances in spherical geometry). This choice for this length scale makes formulas simpler.[2]

In terms of the Poincaré half-plane model absolute length corresponds to the infinitesimal metric   and in the Poincaré disk modelto .

In terms of the (constant and negative) Gaussian curvature K of a hyperbolic plane, a unit of absolute length corresponds to a length of

 .

In a hyperbolic triangle the sum of the angles A, B, C (respectively opposite to the side with the corresponding letter) is strictly less than a straight angle. The difference between the measure of a straight angle and the sum of the measures of a triangle's angles is called the defect of the triangle. The area of a hyperbolic triangle is equal to its defect multiplied by the square of R:

 .

This theorem, first proven by Johann Heinrich Lambert,[3] is related to Girard's theorem in spherical geometry.

Trigonometry

edit

In all the formulas stated below the sides a, b, and c must be measured in absolute length, a unit so that the Gaussian curvature K of the plane is −1. In other words, the quantity R in the paragraph above is supposed to be equal to 1.

Trigonometric formulas for hyperbolic triangles depend on the hyperbolic functions sinh, cosh, and tanh.

Trigonometry of right triangles

edit

IfC is a right angle then:

 
 
 .
 .
 .
 

Relations between angles

edit

We also have the following equations:[5]

 
 
 
 
 

Area

edit

The area of a right angled triangle is:

 

The area for any other triangle is:

 

also

 [citation needed][6]

Angle of parallelism

edit

The instance of an omega triangle with a right angle provides the configuration to examine the angle of parallelism in the triangle.

In this case angle B = 0, a = c =   and  , resulting in  .

Equilateral triangle

edit

The trigonometry formulas of right triangles also give the relations between the sides s and the angles A of an equilateral triangle (a triangle where all sides have the same length and all angles are equal).

The relations are:

 
 

General trigonometry

edit

Whether C is a right angle or not, the following relationships hold: The hyperbolic law of cosines is as follows:

 

Its dual theoremis

 

There is also a law of sines:

 

and a four-parts formula:

 

which is derived in the same way as the analogue formula in spherical trigonometry.


See also

edit

For hyperbolic trigonometry:

References

edit
  1. ^ Stothers, Wilson (2000), Hyperbolic geometry, University of Glasgow, interactive instructional website
  • ^ Needham, Tristan (1998). Visual Complex Analysis. Oxford University Press. p. 270. ISBN 9780198534464.
  • ^ Ratcliffe, John (2006). Foundations of Hyperbolic Manifolds. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 149. Springer. p. 99. ISBN 9780387331973. That the area of a hyperbolic triangle is proportional to its angle defect first appeared in Lambert's monograph Theorie der Parallellinien, which was published posthumously in 1786.
  • ^ Martin, George E. (1998). The foundations of geometry and the non-Euclidean plane (Corrected 4. print. ed.). New York, NY: Springer. p. 433. ISBN 0-387-90694-0.
  • ^ Smogorzhevski, A.S. Lobachevskian geometry. Moscow 1982: Mir Publishers. p. 63.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • ^ "Area of a right angled hyperbolic triangle as function of side lengths". Stack Exchange Mathematics. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  • Further reading

    edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hyperbolic_triangle&oldid=1216738178"
     



    Last edited on 1 April 2024, at 18:14  





    Languages

     


    العربية
    Català
    Чӑвашла
    Español
    Français

    Italiano
    Nederlands
    Português
    Română
    Русский
    Српски / srpski
    Srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
    Svenska
    Українська

     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 1 April 2024, at 18:14 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop