Sharir, MichaSmorodinsky, ShakharValculescu, ClaudiuDe Zeeuw, Frank2018-01-152018-01-152018-01-15201810.1016/j.comgeo.2017.10.008https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/143957WOS:000417965300002We show that for m points and n lines in R-2, the number of distinct distances between the points and the lines is Omega(m(1/5)n(3/5)), as long as m(1/2) <= n <= m(2). We also prove that for any m points in the plane, not all on a line, the number of distances between these points and the lines that they span is Omega(m(4/3)). The problem of bounding the number of distinct point-line distances can be reduced to the problem of bounding the number of tangent pairs among a finite set of lines and a finite set of circles in the plane, and we believe that this latter question is of independent interest. In the same vein, we show that n circles in the plane determine at most Omicron(n(3/2)) points where two or more circles are tangent, improving the previously best known bound of Omicron(n(3/2) logn). Finally, we study three-dimensional versions of the distinct point-line distances problem, namely, distinct point-line distances and distinct point-plane distances. The problems studied in this paper are all new, and the bounds that we derive for them, albeit most likely not tight, are non-trivial to prove. We hope that our work will motivate further studies of these and related problems. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Incidence geometryDiscrete geometryDistinct distances between points and linestext::journal::journal article::research article