chord formula, the area bounded by the
circumcircle and
incircle of every unit regular -gon is /4 More generally, a
polygon in which all vertices are concyclic is called a
cyclic polygon. A polygon is cyclic if and only if the perpendicular bisectors of its edges are
concurrent. Every
regular polygon is a cyclic polygon. For a cyclic polygon with an odd number of sides, all angles are equal if and only if the polygon is regular. A cyclic polygon with an even number of sides has all angles equal if and only if the alternate sides are equal (that is, sides are equal, and sides are equal). A cyclic
pentagon with
rational sides and area is known as a
Robbins pentagon. In all known cases, its diagonals also have rational lengths, though whether this is true for all possible Robbins pentagons is an unsolved problem. In any cyclic -gon with even , the sum of one set of alternate angles (the first, third, fifth, etc.) equals the sum of the other set of alternate angles. This can be proven by induction from the case, in each case replacing a side with three more sides and noting that these three new sides together with the old side form a quadrilateral which itself has this property; the alternate angles of the latter quadrilateral represent the additions to the alternate angle sums of the previous -gon. A
tangential polygon is one having an
inscribed circle tangent to each side of the polygon; these tangency points are thus concyclic on the inscribed circle. Let one -gon be inscribed in a circle, and let another -gon be tangential to that circle at the vertices of the first -gon. Then from any point on the circle, the product of the perpendicular distances from to the sides of the first -gon equals the product of the perpendicular distances from to the sides of the second -gon.
Point on the circumcircle Let a cyclic -gon have vertices on the unit circle. Then for any point on the minor arc , the distances from to the vertices satisfy :\begin{cases} \overline{MA_1} + \overline{MA_3} + \cdots + \overline{MA_{n-2}} + \overline{MA_n} For a regular -gon, if \overline{MA_i} are the distances from any point on the circumcircle to the vertices , then :3(\overline{MA_1}^2 + \overline{MA_2}^2 + \dots + \overline{MA_n}^2)^2=2n (\overline{MA_1}^4 + \overline{MA_2}^4 + \dots + \overline{MA_n}^4).
Polygon circumscribing constant Any
regular polygon is cyclic. Consider a unit circle, then circumscribe a regular triangle such that each side touches the circle. Circumscribe a circle, then circumscribe a square. Again circumscribe a circle, then circumscribe a regular
pentagon, and so on. The radii of the circumscribed circles converge to the so-called
polygon circumscribing constant :\prod_{n=3}^\infty \frac 1 {\cos\left( \frac\pi n \right)} = 8.7000366\ldots. . The reciprocal of this constant is the
Kepler–Bouwkamp constant. ==Variations==