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Given a Triangle 
, the trilinear coordinates of a point 
 with respect to 
 are an
ordered Triple of numbers, each of which is Proportional to the directed distance from 
 to one of the
side lines.  Trilinear coordinates are denoted 
 or 
 and also are known as
Barycentric Coordinates, Homogeneous Coordinates, or ``trilinears.''
In trilinear coordinates, the three Vertices 
, 
, and 
 are given by 
, 
, and
.  Let the point 
 in the above diagram have trilinear coordinates 
 and lie at distances
, 
, and 
 from the sides 
, 
, and 
, respectively.  Then the distances 
, 
,
and 
 can be found by writing 
 for the Area of 
, and similarly for
 and 
.  We then have
| (1) | 
| (2) | 
Trilinear coordinates are unchanged when each is multiplied by any constant 
, so
| (3) | 
| (4) | 
| (5) | 
| (6) | 
Trilinear coordinates for some common Points are summarized in the following table,
where 
, 
, and 
 are the angles at the corresponding vertices and 
, 
, and 
 are the opposite
side lengths.
| Point | Trilinear Center Function | 
| Centroid  | 
|
| Circumcenter  | 
|
| de Longchamps Point | 
 | 
| Equal Detour Point | 
 | 
| Feuerbach Point  | 
|
| Incenter  | 
1 | 
| Isoperimetric Point | 
 | 
| Lemoine Point | |
| Nine-Point Center  | 
|
| Orthocenter  | 
|
| Vertex  | 
|
| Vertex  | 
|
| Vertex  | 
To convert trilinear coordinates to a vector position for a given triangle specified by the 
- and 
-coordinates of
its axes, pick two Unit Vectors along the sides.  For instance, pick
| (7) | |||
| (8) | 
| (9) | 
| (10) | |||
| (11) | 
![]()  | 
(12) | ||
![]()  | 
(13) | 
But 
 and 
 are Unit Vectors, so
![]()  | 
(14) | ||
![]()  | 
(15) | 
| (16) | 
See also Areal Coordinates, Exact Trilinear Coordinates, Orthocentric Coordinates, Power Curve, Quadriplanar Coordinates, Triangle, Trilinear Polar
References
Boyer, C. B.  History of Analytic Geometry.  New York: Yeshiva University, 1956.
 
Casey, J.    ``The General Equation--Trilinear Co-Ordinates.''  Ch. 10 in 
  A Treatise on the Analytical Geometry of the Point, Line, Circle, and Conic Sections, Containing
  an Account of Its Most Recent Extensions, with Numerous Examples, 2nd ed., rev. enl.  Dublin: Hodges, Figgis, & Co., pp. 333-348, 1893.
 
Coolidge, J. L.  A Treatise on Algebraic Plane Curves.  New York: Dover, pp. 67-71, 1959.
 
Coxeter, H. S. M.  Introduction to Geometry, 2nd ed.  New York: Wiley, 1969.
 
Coxeter, H. S. M.  ``Some Applications of Trilinear Coordinates.''  Linear Algebra Appl. 226-228, 375-388, 1995.
 
Kimberling, C.  ``Triangle Centers and Central Triangles.''  Congr. Numer. 129, 1-295, 1998.
 
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein