Marden's theorem

In mathematics, Marden's theorem, named after Morris Marden but proved about 100 years earlier by Jörg Siebeck, gives a geometric relationship between the zeroes of a third-degree polynomial with complex coefficients and the zeroes of its derivative. See also geometrical properties of polynomial roots.

Statement
A cubic polynomial has three zeroes in the complex number plane, which in general form a triangle, and the Gauss–Lucas theorem states that the roots of its derivative lie within this triangle. Marden's theorem states their location within this triangle more precisely:


 * Suppose the zeroes $p(z)$, $p'(z)$, and $p"(z)$ of a third-degree polynomial $z_{1}$ are non-collinear. There is a unique ellipse inscribed in the triangle with vertices $z_{2}$, $z_{3}$, $p(z)$ and tangent to the sides at their midpoints: the Steiner inellipse.  The foci of that ellipse are the zeroes of the derivative $z_{1}$.

Proof
This proof comes from an exercise in Fritz Carlson's book “Geometri” (in Swedish, 1943).

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Additional relations between root locations and the Steiner inellipse
By the Gauss–Lucas theorem, the root of the double derivative $z_{2}$ must be the average of the two foci, which is the center point of the ellipse and the centroid of the triangle. In the special case that the triangle is equilateral (as happens, for instance, for the polynomial $z_{3}$) the inscribed ellipse becomes a circle, and the derivative of $p'(z)$ has a double root at the center of the circle. Conversely, if the derivative has a double root, then the triangle must be equilateral.

Generalizations
A more general version of the theorem, due to, applies to polynomials $p"(z)$ whose degree $p(z) = z^{3} &minus; 1$ may be higher than three, but that have only three roots $p$, $p(z) = (z &minus; a)^{i} (z &minus; b)^{j} (z &minus; c)^{k}$, and $i + j + k$. For such polynomials, the roots of the derivative may be found at the multiple roots of the given polynomial (the roots whose exponent is greater than one) and at the foci of an ellipse whose points of tangency to the triangle divide its sides in the ratios $a$, $b$, and $c$.

Another generalization is to n-gons: some n-gons have an interior ellipse that is tangent to each side at the side's midpoint. Marden's theorem still applies: the foci of this midpoint-tangent inellipse are zeroes of the derivative of the polynomial whose zeroes are the vertices of the n-gon.

History
Jörg Siebeck discovered this theorem 81 years before Marden wrote about it. However, Dan Kalman titled his American Mathematical Monthly paper "Marden's theorem" because, as he writes, "I call this Marden’s Theorem because I first read it in M. Marden’s wonderful book".

attributes what is now known as Marden's theorem to  and cites nine papers that included a version of the theorem. Dan Kalman won the 2009 Lester R. Ford Award of the Mathematical Association of America for his 2008 paper in the American Mathematical Monthly describing the theorem.