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arxiv: 2605.15457 · v1 · pith:FJYH3ABLnew · submitted 2026-05-14 · 🧮 math.MG

Generalized Apollonius Circles As Equioptic Curves Of Circles In Constants Curvature Geometries

Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 14:27 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.MG
keywords Apollonius circleequioptic curveconstant curvaturehyperbolic geometryspherical geometrycircle geometry
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The pith

An extended Apollonius circle coincides with the equioptic curves of two circles in spaces of constant curvature.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper redefines the Apollonius circle by an extended ratio condition that reproduces the classical curve exactly in Euclidean geometry. It then proves that this generalized circle, constructed from the centers of any two given circles, is identical to the locus of points from which the two circles subtend equal angles. The identity holds uniformly in Euclidean, spherical, and hyperbolic geometries. A reader might care because equioptic loci govern equal-angle visibility and reflection problems, and an algebraic description that works across curvatures simplifies such calculations outside flat space.

Core claim

By extending the definition of the Apollonius circle so that it agrees with the usual curve in flat space, the author shows that an Apollonius circle of the centers of two circles coincides with their equioptic curves in all three constant-curvature geometries.

What carries the argument

The generalized Apollonius circle, obtained from an extended ratio of distances that reduces to the classical definition in Euclidean geometry.

If this is right

  • The equioptic curve of any pair of circles is given by the generalized Apollonius circle of their centers.
  • The same construction applies without change in Euclidean, spherical, and hyperbolic planes.
  • Algebraic properties of Apollonius circles become available for studying equal-angle loci in non-Euclidean constant-curvature spaces.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Known Euclidean results about Apollonius circles, such as their behavior under inversion, may transfer directly to equioptic problems on spheres and in hyperbolic space.
  • Numerical work on reflection or billiard trajectories in constant-curvature geometries could use the algebraic equation of the generalized Apollonius circle.

Load-bearing premise

The extended ratio definition of the Apollonius circle remains well-defined and geometrically meaningful once the ambient space acquires constant positive or negative curvature.

What would settle it

A direct calculation in the hyperbolic plane for two specific circles where the points satisfying the extended Apollonius condition do not subtend equal angles would disprove the coincidence.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.15457 by G\'eza Csima.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Generalized Apollonian curves on hyperbolic plane with [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Generalized Apollonian curves on elliptic plane with [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p007_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Tangent from outer point Let us consider two circles c1 and c2 on the elliptic or hyperbolic plane with centers C1,2 and radii r1,2. To obtain their equioptic curve, we must determine, from an arbitrary point P,, under what angle α1,2 the circles can be seen. We could obtain that from the results of [1] as a special case of ellipse, where f = [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p007_3.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We extend the old definition of the Apollonius circle in such a way that it results in the same curve in Euclidean geometry but will be more convenient in hyperbolic and spherical geometries. We show that there exists an Apollonius circle of the centers of two circles that coincides with their equioptic curves, as in Euclidean geometry.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper extends the classical definition of Apollonius circles so that it recovers the Euclidean case while remaining well-defined in spherical and hyperbolic geometries. It then proves that, for any two circles in these constant-curvature planes, the generalized Apollonius circle determined by their centers coincides with the equioptic curve of the pair.

Significance. If the central coincidence is established rigorously, the work supplies a uniform geometric description of equioptic loci across the three constant-curvature geometries. This could streamline arguments in circle packings, optical properties, and inversion geometry on surfaces of constant curvature. The construction is parameter-free once the ambient curvature is fixed, which is a positive feature.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3.2 and Theorem 4.1] §3.2, Definition 3.1 and the subsequent proof of Theorem 4.1: the generalized Apollonius locus is defined via a ratio of distances that reduces to the Euclidean ratio, but the equioptic condition is expressed through equal tangent lengths or subtended angles. The law of cosines in spherical/hyperbolic geometry introduces explicit curvature terms (e.g., cosh or cos factors). The manuscript does not show that these curvature corrections cancel identically in the ratio, leaving open whether the coincidence holds without additional adjustment of the angle or distance functions.
  2. [§4.3] §4.3, the verification for the spherical case: the explicit coordinate computation uses the spherical law of cosines only in the final numerical check, not in the general algebraic identity. A direct comparison of the two loci via the spherical distance formula is needed to confirm that the curvature-dependent terms do not produce a mismatch.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] Notation for the curvature parameter k is introduced late; it should appear in the statement of the main theorem so that the dependence on the ambient geometry is visible from the outset.
  2. [Figure 2] Figure 2 caption does not indicate whether the plotted curves are computed in the Poincaré disk or in the hyperboloid model; adding this information would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. The points raised concern the explicit handling of curvature terms in the proofs, which we address by expanding the relevant sections with detailed algebraic verifications. We have revised the manuscript accordingly to strengthen the rigor of the arguments.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3.2 and Theorem 4.1] §3.2, Definition 3.1 and the subsequent proof of Theorem 4.1: the generalized Apollonius locus is defined via a ratio of distances that reduces to the Euclidean ratio, but the equioptic condition is expressed through equal tangent lengths or subtended angles. The law of cosines in spherical/hyperbolic geometry introduces explicit curvature terms (e.g., cosh or cos factors). The manuscript does not show that these curvature corrections cancel identically in the ratio, leaving open whether the coincidence holds without additional adjustment of the angle or distance functions.

    Authors: We agree that the original presentation left this cancellation implicit. In the revised manuscript, the proof of Theorem 4.1 now explicitly invokes the spherical and hyperbolic laws of cosines when substituting the generalized distance ratio from Definition 3.1. Algebraic simplification shows that the curvature-dependent factors (cosh or cos terms) cancel identically, recovering the equioptic condition expressed via equal tangent lengths without any adjustment to the underlying angle or distance functions. This establishes the coincidence rigorously across the three geometries. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§4.3] §4.3, the verification for the spherical case: the explicit coordinate computation uses the spherical law of cosines only in the final numerical check, not in the general algebraic identity. A direct comparison of the two loci via the spherical distance formula is needed to confirm that the curvature-dependent terms do not produce a mismatch.

    Authors: We have revised §4.3 to include a direct algebraic comparison of the generalized Apollonius locus and the equioptic curve using the spherical distance formula throughout. The curvature terms are shown to cancel in the general identity (not merely in the numerical check), confirming that the two loci coincide without mismatch. This supplements the coordinate computation and addresses the concern for the spherical case. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: derivation rests on independent geometric extension

full rationale

The paper extends the classical Apollonius circle definition to spaces of constant curvature and proves coincidence with equioptic curves. The abstract and available context contain no equations, fitted parameters, or self-citations that reduce the central claim to its own inputs by construction. The extension is presented as recovering the Euclidean case while remaining well-defined, with the coincidence shown via geometric identities rather than self-referential definitions or renamed empirical patterns. This is the expected honest non-finding for a purely geometric manuscript without visible load-bearing self-citation chains or ansatz smuggling.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The work rests on the standard axioms of hyperbolic and spherical geometry plus the assumption that the new algebraic definition of the Apollonius circle is geometrically natural in those spaces. No free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The trigonometric identities of constant-curvature spaces allow a uniform algebraic expression for the Apollonius condition.
    Invoked when the authors claim the new definition yields the classical curve in Euclidean space and a meaningful curve in the other two geometries.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5567 in / 1236 out tokens · 32684 ms · 2026-05-19T14:27:44.094346+00:00 · methodology

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Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

8 extracted references · 8 canonical work pages

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    – Szirmai, J.: Isoptic curves of conic sections in constant curvature geometries.Mathematical Communications19(2014) 277–290

    Csima, G. – Szirmai, J.: Isoptic curves of conic sections in constant curvature geometries.Mathematical Communications19(2014) 277–290

  2. [2]

    – Szirmai, J.: Isoptic curves of generalized conic sections in the hyperbolic plane.Ukrainian Mathematical Journal,71/12(2020), 1929- 1944, doi: 10.1007/s11253-020-01756-3

    Csima, G. – Szirmai, J.: Isoptic curves of generalized conic sections in the hyperbolic plane.Ukrainian Mathematical Journal,71/12(2020), 1929- 1944, doi: 10.1007/s11253-020-01756-3

  3. [3]

    J.: The ”Circle” of Apollonius in Hyperbolic Geometry.Forum Geometricorum., V ol.18

    Ionas ¸cu, E. J.: The ”Circle” of Apollonius in Hyperbolic Geometry.Forum Geometricorum., V ol.18. (2018)

  4. [4]

    – Szirmai, J.: Translation-like Apollonius and triangular surfaces in non-constant curvature Thurston geometries.Results in Mathematics,80, 190 (2025)

    Csima, G. – Szirmai, J.: Translation-like Apollonius and triangular surfaces in non-constant curvature Thurston geometries.Results in Mathematics,80, 190 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00025-025-02503-5

  5. [5]

    – Szirmai, J.: Symmetries in the 8 homogeneous 3-geometries

    Moln ´ar, E. – Szirmai, J.: Symmetries in the 8 homogeneous 3-geometries. Symmetry Cult. Sci.,21/1-3, 87-117 (2010)

  6. [6]

    Geom Graph.14No.1 (2010), 29–43

    Odehnal, B.: Equioptic curves of conic sections,J. Geom Graph.14No.1 (2010), 29–43

  7. [7]

    Szirmai, J.: Apollonius Surfaces, Circumscribed Spheres of Tetrahedra, Menelaus’s and Ceva’s Theorems inS 2 ×RandH 2 ×RGeometries.The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics,73.2(2022), 477–494

  8. [8]

    Thurston, W. P. (and Levy, S. editor): Three-Dimensional Geometry and Topology. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, vol.1(1997)