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Triangles, Angles, and Area

The Poincare half-plane model is conformal, which means that hyperbolic angles in the Poincare half-plane model are exactly the same as the Euclidean angles (with the angles between two intersecting circles being the angle between their tangent lines at the point of intersection. A hyperbolic triangle is just three points connected by (hyperbolic) line segments. Despite all these connetions, hyperbolic triangles are quite different from Euclidean triangles.

Since the hyperbolic line segments are (usually) curved, the angles of a hyperbolic triangle add up to strictly less than 180 degrees. Since a quadrilateral can always be cut into two triangles, a quadrilateral must have its angles sum to less than 360 degrees, so in hyperbolic geometry there are no squares, which makes defining area in terms of square units difficult. Defining area in hyperbolic geometry is quite technical and we won't worry much about it in this class (stop by and see me if you want to go over the details, but be sure you have a fair bit of time to spend :-)

Two other major differences between hyperbolic triangles and Euclidean triangles are

The applet

To help get you familiar with hyperbolic triangles, I've prepared an applet to let you experiment with them. You will need a java enabled browser to run the applet (Netscape 3.0 or higher or Internet Explorer 3.0 or higher on either Windows 95 or a Mac work). Once you've read the following instructions, click the link below to launch the applet. It will launch in a new window. If the resolution of your monitor is 640x480, you will probably be best off maximizing the window. If the resolution of your monitor is 800x600 or larger, you should see everything just fine the way it comes up on its own.

In the applet you will have a red point, a blue point, and a green point. To help the green pont show up well, the background is now a light gray, though the edge of the half-plane is still marked with the same (darker) gray as in previous applets. The points are connected by (hyperbolic) line segments to make a triangle. The angles of the triangle are listed below the edge of the half-plane. They are color coded, so the angle at the red point is given in red, etc. Below these angles are the sum of the three angles and the area of the triangle. Clickyour mouse on a point and drag it (while holding the mouse button down) to move the point. The triangle will follow the point as in the other applets. (Bug warning: Sometimes when the window is covered and then uncovered by other windows on your computer monitor the applet doesn't redraw itself completely. If you click on a point and move it, or if you minimize and then restore the window, the applet will redraw itself properly again.)

Things to try

Click here to launch applet. (Will open a new window.)


Please report any problems with this web site to bennett@math.ksu.edu.