In geometry, an arbelos is a plane region bounded by a semicircle of diameter 1, connected to semicircles of diameters r and (1 − r), all oriented the same way and sharing a common baseline. Archimedes is believed to be the first mathematician to study its mathematical properties, as it appears in propositions four through eight of his Book of Lemmas. Arbelos literally means "shoemaker's knife" in Greek; it resembles the blade of a knife used by ancient cobblers.[1]
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A circle with a diameter HA is equal in area with the arbelos
If BC = 1 and BA = r, then



By substitution:
. By expansion:
. By substituting for y2 into the equation for triangle BHC and solving for x:

By substituting this, solve for y and h


The radius of the circle with center O is:

Therefore, the area is:


The area of the arbelos is the area of the large semicircle minus the area of the two smaller semicircles. Therefore the area of the arbelos is:



Q.E.D.[2]
This property appears as Proposition 4 in Archimedes' Book of Lemmas:
If AB be the diameter of a semicircle and N any point on AB, and if semicircles be described within the first semicircle and having AN, BN as diameters respectively, the figure included between the circumferences of the three semicircles is [what Archimedes called "αρβελοσ"]; and its area is equal to the circle on PN as diameter, where PN is perpendicular to AB and meets the original semicircle in P.
The segment BH intersects the semicircle BA at D. The segment CH intersects the semicircle AC at E. Then DHEA is a rectangle.
The line DE is tangent to semicircle BA at D and semicircle AC at E.
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