Steiner chains A
Steiner chain for two disjoint circles is a finite cyclic sequence of additional circles, each of which is tangent to the two given circles and to its two neighbors in the chain. Steiner's porism states that if two circles have a Steiner chain, they have infinitely many such chains. The chain is allowed to wrap more than once around the two circles, and can be characterized by a rational number p whose numerator is the number of circles in the chain and whose denominator is the number of times it wraps around. All chains for the same two circles have the same value of p. If the inversive distance between the two circles (after taking the inverse hyperbolic cosine) is \delta, then p can be found by the formula :p=\frac{\pi}{\sin^{-1}\tanh(\delta/2)}. Conversely, every two disjoint circles for which this formula gives a
rational number will support a Steiner chain. More generally, an arbitrary pair of disjoint circles can be approximated arbitrarily closely by pairs of circles that support Steiner chains whose p values are
rational approximations to the value of this formula for the given two circles. Although less is known about the existence of inversive distance circle packings than for tangent circle packings, it is known that, when they exist, they can be uniquely specified (up to Möbius transformations) by a given
maximal planar graph and set of Euclidean or hyperbolic inversive distances. This
rigidity property can be generalized broadly, to Euclidean or hyperbolic metrics on triangulated
manifolds with
angular defects at their vertices. However, for manifolds with spherical geometry, these packings are no longer unique. In turn, inversive-distance circle packings have been used to construct approximations to
conformal mappings. == References ==