Both of the families of Apollonian circles are
pencils of circles. Each is determined by any two of its members, called
generators of the pencil. Specifically, one is an
elliptic pencil (red family of circles in the figure) that is defined by two generators that pass through each other in exactly
two points (). The other is a
hyperbolic pencil (blue family of circles in the figure) that is defined by two generators that do not intersect each other at
any point.
Radical axis and central line Any two of these circles within a pencil have the same
radical axis, and all circles in the pencil have
collinear centers. Any three or more circles from the same family are called
coaxial circles or
coaxal circles. The elliptic pencil of circles passing through the two points (the set of red circles, in the figure) has the line as its radical axis. The centers of the circles in this pencil lie on the perpendicular bisector of . The hyperbolic pencil defined by points (the blue circles) has its radical axis on the perpendicular bisector of line , and all its circle centers on line . ==Inversive geometry, orthogonal intersection, and coordinate systems==