In a triangle ABC with sides a, b, and c, where the vertices are labeled A, B and C in counterclockwise order, there is exactly one point P such that the line segmentsAP, BP, and CP form the same angle, ω, with the respective sides c, a, and b, namely that Point P is called the first Brocard point of the triangle ABC, and the angle ω is called the Brocard angle of the triangle. This angle has the property that where are the vertex angles respectively. There is also a second Brocard point, Q, in triangle ABC such that line segmentsAQ, BQ, and CQ form equal angles with sides b, c, and a respectively. In other words, the equations apply. Remarkably, this second Brocard point has the same Brocard angle as the first Brocard point. In other words, angle is the same as The two Brocard points are closely related to one another; In fact, the difference between the first and the second depends on the order in which the angles of triangle ABC are taken. So for example, the first Brocard point of triangle ABC is the same as the second Brocard point of triangle ACB. The two Brocard points of a triangle ABC are isogonal conjugates of each other.
Construction
The most elegant construction of the Brocard points goes as follows. In the following example the first Brocard point is presented, but the construction for the second Brocard point is very similar. As in the diagram above, form a circle through points A and B, tangent to edge BC of the triangle. Symmetrically, form a circle through points B and C, tangent to edge AC, and a circle through points A and C, tangent to edge AB. These three circles have a common point, the first Brocard point of triangle ABC. See alsoTangent lines to circles. The three circles just constructed are also designated as epicycles of triangle ABC. The second Brocard point is constructed in similar fashion.
Trilinears and barycentrics of the first two Brocard points
The Brocard points are an example of a bicentric pair of points, but they are not triangle centers because neither Brocard point is invariant under similarity transformations: reflecting a scalene triangle, a special case of a similarity, turns one Brocard point into the other. However, the unordered pair formed by both points is invariant under similarities. The midpoint of the two Brocard points, called the Brocard midpoint, has trilinear coordinates and is a triangle center. The third Brocard point, given in trilinear coordinates as is the Brocard midpoint of the anticomplementary triangle and is also the isotomic conjugate of the symmedian point. The distance between the first two Brocard points P and Q is always less than or equal to half the radius R of the triangle's circumcircle: The segment between the first two Brocard points is perpendicularly bisected at the Brocard midpoint by the line connecting the triangle's circumcenter and its Lemoine point. Moreover, the circumcenter, the Lemoine point, and the first two Brocard points are concyclic—they all fall on the same circle, of which the segment connecting the circumcenter and the Lemoine point is a diameter.
Distance from circumcenter
The Brocard points P and Q are equidistant from the triangle's circumcenter O:
Similarities and congruences
The pedal triangles of the first and second Brocard points are congruent to each other and similar to the original triangle. If the linesAP, BP, and CP, each through one of a triangle's vertices and its first Brocard point, intersect the triangle's circumcircle at points L, M, and N, then the triangle LMN is congruent with the original triangle ABC. The same is true if the first Brocard point P is replaced by the second Brocard point Q.