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Inscribed figure





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Ingeometry, an inscribed planar shapeorsolid is one that is enclosed by and "fits snugly" inside another geometric shape or solid.[1] To say that "figure F is inscribed in figure G" means precisely the same thing as "figure G is circumscribed about figure F". A circleorellipse inscribed in a convex polygon (or a sphereorellipsoid inscribed in a convex polyhedron) is tangent to every sideorface of the outer figure (but see Inscribed sphere for semantic variants). A polygon inscribed in a circle, ellipse, or polygon (or a polyhedron inscribed in a sphere, ellipsoid, or polyhedron) has each vertex on the outer figure; if the outer figure is a polygon or polyhedron, there must be a vertex of the inscribed polygon or polyhedron on each side of the outer figure. An inscribed figure is not necessarily unique in orientation; this can easily be seen, for example, when the given outer figure is a circle, in which case a rotation of an inscribed figure gives another inscribed figure that is congruent to the original one.

Inscribed circles of various polygons
An inscribed triangle of a circle
Atetrahedron (red) inscribed in a cube (yellow) which is, in turn, inscribed in a rhombic triacontahedron (grey).
(Click here for rotating model)

Familiar examples of inscribed figures include circles inscribed in trianglesorregular polygons, and triangles or regular polygons inscribed in circles. A circle inscribed in any polygon is called its incircle, in which case the polygon is said to be a tangential polygon. A polygon inscribed in a circle is said to be a cyclic polygon, and the circle is said to be its circumscribed circle or circumcircle.

The inradius or filling radius of a given outer figure is the radius of the inscribed circle or sphere, if it exists.

The definition given above assumes that the objects concerned are embedded in two- or three-dimensional Euclidean space, but can easily be generalized to higher dimensions and other metric spaces.

For an alternative usage of the term "inscribed", see the inscribed square problem, in which a square is considered to be inscribed in another figure (even a non-convex one) if all four of its vertices are on that figure.

Properties

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Sanders, J. Edward; Zerr, G. B. M. (1908). "193". The American Mathematical Monthly. 15 (10): 189–190. doi:10.2307/2969584. JSTOR 2969584.
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Last edited on 30 November 2023, at 19:50  





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This page was last edited on 30 November 2023, at 19:50 (UTC).

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