No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2025
In geometry, we sometimes prove that a certain configuration Q has property P. If it turns out that Q is the only configuration that has property P, then we say that P is a characterisation of Q. For example, the centre of a circle is a point in the plane which is equidistant from every point on the circumference of the circle. In fact, the centre is the only point in the plane which is equidistant from every point on the circumference of a given circle. Thus we say that the centre of a circle is characterised by this property.