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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! In geometry, the Woo circles, introduced by Peter Y. Woo, are a set of infinitely many Archimedean circles. Form an arbelos with the two inner semicircles tangent at point C. Let m denote any nonnegative real number. Draw two circles, with radii m times the radius of the smaller two arbelos semicircles. centered on the arbelos ground line, also tangent to each other at point C and with radius m times the radius of the corresponding small arbelos arc. Any circle centered on the Schoch line and externally tangent to the circles is a Woo circle. An…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! In geometry, the Woo circles, introduced by Peter Y. Woo, are a set of infinitely many Archimedean circles. Form an arbelos with the two inner semicircles tangent at point C. Let m denote any nonnegative real number. Draw two circles, with radii m times the radius of the smaller two arbelos semicircles. centered on the arbelos ground line, also tangent to each other at point C and with radius m times the radius of the corresponding small arbelos arc. Any circle centered on the Schoch line and externally tangent to the circles is a Woo circle. An Archimedean circle was first constructed by Archimedes in his Book of Lemmas. In his book, he constructed what is now known as Archimedes' twin circles. In geometry, an Archimedean circle is any circle constructed from an arbelos that has the same radius as each of Archimedes' twin circles.