Musselman's theorem
In Euclidean geometry, Musselman's theorem is a property of certain circles defined by an arbitrary triangle.

Specifically, let be a triangle, and
,
, and
its vertices. Let
,
, and
be the vertices of the reflection triangle
, obtained by mirroring each vertex of
across the opposite side.[1] Let
be the circumcenter of
. Consider the three circles
,
, and
defined by the points
,
, and
, respectively. The theorem says that these three Musselman circles meet in a point
, that is the inverse with respect to the circumcenter of
of the isogonal conjugate or the nine-point center of
.[2]
The common point is the Gilbert point of
, which is point
in Clark Kimberling's list of triangle centers.[2][3]
History
The theorem was proposed as an advanced problem by J. R. Musselman and R. Goormaghtigh in 1939,[4] and a proof was presented by them in 1941.[5] A generalization of this result was stated and proved by Goormaghtigh.[6]
Goormaghtigh’s generalization
The generalization of Musselman's theorem by Goormaghtigh does not mention the circles explicitly.
As before, let ,
, and
be the vertices of a triangle
, and
its circumcenter. Let
be the orthocenter of
, that is, the intersection of its three altitude lines. Let
,
, and
be three points on the segments
,
, and
, such that
. Consider the three lines
,
, and
, perpendicular to
,
, and
though the points
,
, and
, respectively. Let
,
, and
be the intersections of these perpendicular with the lines
,
, and
, respectively.
It had been observed by J. Neuberg, in 1884, that the three points ,
, and
lie on a common line
.[7] Let
be the projection of the circumcenter
on the line
, and
the point on
such that
. Goormaghtigh proved that
is the inverse with respect to the circumcircle of
of the isogonal conjugate of the point
on the Euler line
, such that
.[8][9]
References
- ↑ D. Grinberg (2003) On the Kosnita Point and the Reflection Triangle. Forum Geometricorum, volume 3, pages 105–111
- 1 2 Eric W. Weisstein (), Musselman's theorem. online document, accessed on 2014-10-05.
- ↑ Clark Kimberling (2014), Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers, section X(1154) = Gilbert Point. Accessed on 2014-10-08
- ↑ J. R. Musselman and R. Goormaghtigh (1939), Advanced Problem 3928. American Mathematics Monthly, volume 46, page 601
- ↑ J. R. Musselman and R. Goormaghtigh (1941), Solution to Advanced Problem 3928. American Mathematics Monthly, volume 48, pages 281–283
- ↑ Jean-Louis Ayme (), le point de Kosnitza, page 10. Online document, accessed on 2014-10-05.
- ↑ J. Neuberg (1884), Mémoir sur le Tetraèdre. According to Nguyen, Neuberg also states Goormaghtigh's theorem, but incorrectly.
- ↑ Khoa Lu Nguyen (2005), A synthetic proof of Goormaghtigh's generalization of Musselman's theorem. Forum Geometricorum, volume 5, pages 17–20
- ↑ Ion Patrascu and Catalin Barbu (2012), Two new proofs of Goormaghtigh theorem. International Journal of Geometry, volume 1, pages=10–19, ISSN 2247-9880