The concept of
Ford circles can be generalized from the rational numbers to the Gaussian rationals, giving Ford spheres. In this construction, the complex numbers are embedded as a plane in a three-dimensional
Euclidean space, and for each Gaussian rational point in this plane one constructs a sphere tangent to the plane at that point. For a Gaussian rational represented in lowest terms as p/q (i.e. and are relatively prime), the radius of this sphere should be 1/2|q|^2 where |q|^2 = q \bar q is the squared modulus, and is the
complex conjugate. The resulting spheres are
tangent for pairs of Gaussian rationals P/Q and p/q with |Pq-pQ|=1, and otherwise they do not intersect each other. ==References==