Exeter point

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English[edit]

Construction of the Exeter point of a triangle
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Etymology[edit]

Named for the Phillips Exeter Academy (in the town of Exeter, New Hampshire), where it was discovered during a computers-in-mathematics workshop in 1986.

Noun[edit]

Exeter point (plural Exeter points)

  1. (geometry, given a triangle ΔABC whose medians intersect its circumcircle at {A, A’}, {B, B’} and {C, C’} and ΔDEF constructed from the tangent lines at A, B and C such that D, E and F are respectively opposite A, B and C) The point of concurrence of the rays DA’, EB’ and FC’.
    • 2015, Gerard Venema, Just the Facts 101: Foundations of Geometry, Cram101 Textbook Reviews, unnumbered page:
      It [the Euler line] passes through the centroid, the Exeter point and the center of the nine-point circle of the triangle.

Usage notes[edit]

Designated X(22) in Clark Kimberling's online Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers.

Further reading[edit]