Lesson 12: Equidistance—A Focus on Distance
x The set of points equidistant from a pair of intersecting lines is precisely the set of points on an angle
bisector of those lines.
x The three angle bisectors of a triangle coincide at a single point. This point is equidistant from all three
sides of the triangle and, therefore, lies at the center of a circle inside the triangle tangent to all three of
its sides.
Summary
Identifying the set of all points of equal distances from a given set of objects provides a powerful tool for
proving results in geometry. In this lesson, we examine equidistance between points and between lines and
prove the existence of special circles for triangles. We also solve some standard schoolbook geometry problems
in sophisticated ways.
Example 1
/HWA ͼͽDQGB ͼͽ
Dͽ )LQGWKHHTXDWLRQRIWKHSHUSHQGLFXODUELVHFWRURIAB.
Eͽ )LQGDSRLQWP on this line with xFRRUGLQDWHHTXDOWR
Fͽ 8VHWKHGLVWDQFHIRUPXODWRYHULI\WKDWP is indeed equidistant from A and B.
Solution
Dͽ 7KHSHUSHQGLFXODUELVHFWRUSDVVHVWKURXJKWKHPLGSRLQWͼͽDQGLWVVORSHLVWKHQHJDWLYHUHFLSURFDO
of slope AB ^84 2.
Its equation is thus yx^252 1 , or yx 25.^12
Eͽ 3XWx = 10 to see that y 55,^12 giving y 2259 2.
We have P §· ̈ ̧©¹10,^92.
Fͽ PA (^7492) ̈ ̧§·©¹ 2443 2 9 205 and PB 39.^2 ©¹ ̈ ̧§·^132442169205
These are indeed equal.