Can Morley's theorem be generalized? - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-24T02:21:31Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/93821 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93821/can-morleys-theorem-be-generalized Can Morley's theorem be generalized? Timothy Chow 2012-04-12T03:58:40Z 2012-06-28T20:23:08Z <p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morley%27s_trisector_theorem" rel="nofollow">Morley's theorem</a> states that in any triangle, the three points of intersection of the adjacent angle trisectors form an equilateral triangle.</p> <p>In a talk some years ago, David Rusin made the provocative claim that Morley's theorem is a rare example of a striking theorem that defies generalization. The first ideas that come to everyone's mind&mdash;passing to higher dimensions or hyperbolic geometry for example&mdash;don't work.</p> <p>The proof by Alain Connes yields a mild generalization of sorts, but not a very satisfying one in my opinion. Wikipedia claims that there are "various generalizations" of Morley's theorem, but by this it seems to mean <i>extensions</i> of Morley's theorem, i.e., further equilateral triangles that one can construct. This is not what I would, strictly speaking, call a "generalization."</p> <p>So is David Rusin correct?</p> <blockquote> <p>Are there no satisfactory generalizations of Morley's theorem?</p> </blockquote> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93821/can-morleys-theorem-be-generalized/94784#94784 Answer by Jamie J. Taylor for Can Morley's theorem be generalized? Jamie J. Taylor 2012-04-21T22:24:26Z 2012-04-21T22:24:26Z <p>Please forgive me if you are aware of this result (as it is linked from the Wikipedia page, albeit in another context), but there is a paper by Richard K. Guy called "<a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/27642143" rel="nofollow">The lighthouse theorem, Morley &amp; Malfatti—a budget of paradoxes</a>" in the American Mathematical Monthly. The eponymous theorem could be considered a generalization of Morley's theorem:</p> <blockquote> <p><strong>Lighthouse Theorem</strong>. Two sets of $n$ lines at equal angular distances, one set through each of the points $B$, $C$, intersect in $n^2$ points that are the vertices of $n$ regular $n$-gons.</p> </blockquote> <p>Naturally, it is not clear how this would qualify as a generalization, but the connecting observation is the following:</p> <blockquote> <p><strong>The Morley Miracle</strong>. The nine edges of the equilateral triangles of the Lighthouse Theorem for $n=3$ are the Morley lines of a triangle.</p> </blockquote> <p>Properly, the Lighthouse Theorem should be enlarged to include enough observations to make this connection. For example, the $n^2$ lines of the $n$ regular $n$-gons form $n$ families of $\binom{n}{2}$ parallel lines; if $n$ is odd, then the $n$-gons are homothetic. Moreover, there is an angle duplication result that establishes the presence of the trisectors.</p> <p>From Guy's point of view, the particularly pleasant appearance of Morley's theorem is due to the fact that $\binom{n}{2} = n$ for $n=3$. For comparison, the case $n=2$ is even simpler and may be regarded as the statement that the altitudes of a triangle concur. (The $n$ $n$-gons are an orthocentric system.) The case $n=4$ gives some properties of Malfatti circles. For all of these interpretations, Guy wrestles with the "paradox" that you recover theorems about a triangle even though you don't start with any triangles.</p> <p>Again, my apologies if you're aware of all of this. I imagine you may be, in which case I justify my answer as simply too long for a comment!</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93821/can-morleys-theorem-be-generalized/94938#94938 Answer by Dave Rusin for Can Morley's theorem be generalized? Dave Rusin 2012-04-23T13:03:35Z 2012-04-23T13:03:35Z <p>The generalization I was hoping for would start with: "Given any simplex in R^n, ..."; the case n=2 of this theorem would then be Morley's theorem.</p> <p>I recall starting with a random tetrahedron in R^3 and trying a bunch of constructions looking for something regular to appear: I believe the variations I tried included trisecting and quadrisecting the dihedral angles, and drawing a few sets of regularly-spaced rays out of each vertex. Any three planes, any ray-plane pair, and occasional pairs of rays provide points of intersection, but I don't recall finding even any isosceles triangles among those points of intersection. Perhaps I miscalculated (or am mis-remembering)?</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93821/can-morleys-theorem-be-generalized/100892#100892 Answer by Matt for Can Morley's theorem be generalized? Matt 2012-06-28T20:23:08Z 2012-06-28T20:23:08Z <p>Morley originally found this theorem as a trivial case of much more complicated theorems. Anyone who says this theorem defies generalization is really just saying that they are unaware of its history.</p> <p>See <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/2321680?seq=1" rel="nofollow">Oakley and Baker's 1978 paper</a> for extensive discussion of Morley's theorem and over 100 references.</p> <p>See also <a href="http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/7636/has-anything-further-been-done-with-morleys-miracle/34188#34188" rel="nofollow">this question and answer</a>, somewhat similar in spirit to the present question.</p>