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Mathematics Session Cartesian Coordinate Geometry And Straight Lines Session Objectives 1. Cartesian Coordinate system and Quadrants 2. Distance formula 3. Area of a triangle 4. Collinearity of three points 5. Section formula 6. Special points in a triangle 7. Locus and equation to a locus 8. Translation of axes - shift of origin 9. Translation of axes - rotation of axes René Descartes Y Y-axis : Y’OY 3 2 X-axis : X’OX O -4 -3 -2 -1 X 1 -1 Origin -2 -ve direction Y’ -3 2 -ve direction X’ 1 +ve direction Coordinates 3 4 +ve direction Coordinates Y 3 2 Abcissa 1 X’ (2,1) O -4 -3 -2 -1 X 1 -1 Ordinate 2 3 4 -2 (-3,-2) Y’ -3 (?,?) Coordinates Y 3 2 Abcissa 1 X’ (2,1) O -4 -3 -2 -1 X 1 -1 Ordinate 2 3 4 -2 (-3,-2) Y’ -3 (4,?) Coordinates Y 3 2 Abcissa 1 X’ (2,1) O -4 -3 -2 -1 X 1 -1 Ordinate 2 3 4 -2 (-3,-2) Y’ -3 (4,-2.5) Quadrants Y (-,+) X’ II (+,+) O IV III (-,-) I Y’ (+,-) X Quadrants Y (-,+) (+,+) X’ II O X IV III (-,-) I Y’ (+,-) Ist? IInd? Q : (1,0) lies in which Quadrant? A : None. Points which lie on the axes do not lie in any quadrant. Distance Formula x1 X’ O Y’ (x2-x1) x2 PQ PQN is a right angled . y1 N y2 y2-y1 Y PQ2 = PN2 + QN2 PQ2 = (x2-x1)2+(y2-y1)2 X 2 x2 x1 2 y2 y1 Distance From Origin Distance of P(x, y) from the origin is 2 2 x 0 y 0 x2 y2 Applications of Distance Formula Parallelogram Applications of Distance Formula Rhombus Applications of Distance Formula Rectangle Applications of Distance Formula Square Area of a Triangle A(x1, y1) B(x2, y2) Y X’ O M C(x3, y3) L N X Y’ Area of ABC = Area of trapezium ABML + Area of trapezium ALNC - Area of trapezium BMNC Area of a Triangle X’O Y’ A(x1, y1) B(x2, y2) Y M C(x3, y3) L N X Area of trapezium ABML + Area of trapezium ALNC - Area of trapezium BMNC 1 1 1 BM AL ML AL CN LN BM CN MN 2 2 2 1 1 1 y2 y1 x1 x2 y1 y3 x3 x1 y2 y3 x3 x2 2 2 2 x1 y1 1 Sign of Area : Points anticlockwise +ve 1 x2 y2 1 Points clockwise -ve 2 x3 y3 1 Area of Polygons Area of polygon with points Ai (xi, yi) where i = 1 to n 1 x1 2 x2 y1 y2 x2 y2 x3 y3 ... xn 1 yn 1 xn yn Can be used to calculate area of Quadrilateral, Pentagon, Hexagon etc. xn x1 yn y1 Collinearity of Three Points Method I : Use Distance Formula a b c Show that a+b = c Collinearity of Three Points Method II : Use Area of Triangle A (x1, y1) B (x2, y2) C (x3, y3) Show that x1 y1 1 x2 y2 1 0 x3 y3 1 Section Formula – Internal Division Y K H X’ O L N M Y’ mx2 nx1 my2 ny1 P , m n m n Clearly AHP ~ PKB AP AH PH BP PK BK y y1 X m x x1 n x2 x y2 y Midpoint Midpoint of A(x1, y1) and B(x2,y2) m:n 1:1 x1 x2 y1 y2 P , 2 2 Section Formula – External Division Y P divides AB externally in ratio m:n K H X’ O Y’ L N M Clearly PAH ~ PBK AP AH PH BP BK PK y y1 X m x x1 n x x2 y y2 mx2 nx1 my2 ny1 P , m n m n Centroid Intersection of medians of a triangle is called the centroid. A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) Centroid is always denoted by G. x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 Centroid A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 Consider points L, M, N dividing AD, BE and CF respectively in the ratio 2:1 x2 x3 y2 y3 x 2 y 2 1 1 2 2 L , 12 12 Centroid A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 Consider points L, M, N dividing AD, BE and CF respectively in the ratio 2:1 x1 x3 y1 y3 x 2 y 2 2 2 2 2 M , 12 12 Centroid A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 Consider points L, M, N dividing AD, BE and CF respectively in the ratio 2:1 x1 x2 y1 y2 x 2 y 2 3 3 2 2 N , 12 12 Centroid A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 L 1 , 3 3 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 M 1 , 3 3 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 N 1 , 3 3 We see that L M N G Medians are concurrent at the centroid, centroid divides medians in ratio 2:1 Centroid A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E G D x x3 y1 y3 E 1 , 2 2 x x3 y2 y3 D 2 , 2 2 C(x3, y3) x x2 y1 y2 F 1 , 2 2 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 L 1 , 3 3 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 M 1 , 3 3 x x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 N 1 , 3 3 We see that L M N G Centroid x1 x2 x3 y1 y2 y3 G , 3 3 Incentre Intersection of angle bisectors of a triangle is called the incentre A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E I D C(x3, y3) Let BC = a, AC = b, AB = c Incentre is the centre of the incircle AD, BE and CF are the angle bisectors of A, B and C respectively. BD AB b D bx2 cx3 , by2 cy3 bc b c DC AC c Incentre A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E I D BD AB b DC AC c C(x3, y3) bx cx3 by2 cy3 D 2 , b c b c AI AB AC AB AC c b ID BD DC BD DC a bx2 cx3 by2 cy3 ay1 b c ax1 b c b c b c I , a b c a b c Similarly I can be derived ax1 bx2 cx3 I using E and F also abc Now, Incentre A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E I D BD AB b DC AC c C(x3, y3) bx cx3 by2 cy3 D 2 , b c b c AI AB AC AB AC c b ID BD DC BD DC a bx2 cx3 by2 cy3 ay1 b c ax1 b c b c b c I , a b c a b c Angle bisectors are ax1 bx2 cx3 I concurrent at the incentre abc Now, Excentre Intersection of external angle bisectors of a triangle is called the excentre E A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E D C(x3, y3) EA = Excentre opposite A Excentre is the centre of the excircle ax1 bx2 cx3 ay1 by2 cy3 EA , a b c a b c Excentre Intersection of external angle bisectors of a triangle is called the excentre E A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E D C(x3, y3) EB = Excentre opposite B ax1 bx2 cx3 ay1 by2 cy3 EB , a b c a b c Excentre is the centre of the excircle Excentre Intersection of external angle bisectors of a triangle is called the excentre E A(x1, y1) F B(x2, y2) E D C(x3, y3) EC = Excentre opposite C ax1 bx2 cx3 ay1 by2 cy3 EC , a b c a b c Excentre is the centre of the excircle Cirumcentre Intersection of perpendicular bisectors of the sides of a triangle is called the circumcentre. A C O OA = OB = OC = circumradius B The above relation gives two simultaneous linear equations. Their solution gives the coordinates of O. Orthocentre Intersection of altitudes of a triangle is called the orthocentre. A H B Orthocentre is always denoted by H C We will learn to find coordinates of Orthocentre after we learn straight lines and their equations Cirumcentre, Centroid and Orthocentre The circumcentre O, Centroid G and Orthocentre H of a triangle are collinear. H O G G divides OH in the ratio 1:2 Locus – a Definition The curve described by a point which moves under a given condition or conditions is called its locus e.g. locus of a point having a constant distance from a fixed point : Circle!! Locus – a Definition The curve described by a point which moves under a given condition or conditions is called its locus e.g. locus of a point equidistant from two fixed points : Perpendicular bisector!! Equation to a Locus The equation to the locus of a point is that relation which is satisfied by the coordinates of every point on the locus of that point Important : A Locus is NOT an equation. But it is associated with an equation Equation to a Locus Algorithm to find the equation to a locus : Step I : Assume the coordinates of the point whose locus is to be found to be (h,k) Step II : Write the given conditions in mathematical form using h, k Step III : Eliminate the variables, if any Step IV : Replace h by x and k by y in Step III. The equation thus obtained is the required equation to locus Illustrative Example Find the equation to the locus of the point equidistant from A(1, 3) and B(-2, 1) Solution : Let the point be P(h,k) PA = PB (given) PA2 = PB2 (h-1)2+(k-3)2 = (h+2)2+(k-1)2 6h+4k = 5 equation of locus of (h,k) is 6x+4y = 5 Illustrative Example A rod of length l slides with its ends on perpendicular lines. Find the locus of its midpoint. Solution : Let the point be P(h,k) Let the lines be the axes Let the rod meet the axes at B(0,b) A(a,0) and B(0,b) h = a/2, k = b/2 P(h,k) Also, a2+b2 = l2 4h2+4k2 = l2 O equation of locus of (h,k) is 4x2+4y2 = l2 A(a,0) Shift of Origin Y P(x,y) X O’(h,k) X’ O Y’ x Y y Consider a point P(x, y) Let the origin be shifted to O’ with coordinates (h, k) X relative to old axes Let new P (X, Y) x = X + h, y = Y + k X = x - h, Y = y - k O (-h, -k) with reference to new axes Illustrative Problem Show that the distance between two points is invariant under translation of the axes Solution : Let the points have vertices A(x1, y1), B(x2, y2) Let the origin be shifted to (h, k) new coordinates : A(x1-h, y1-k), B(x2-h, y2-k) Old dist. & New dist. (x1 x2 )2 (y1 y2 )2 (x1 h x2 h)2 (y1 h y2 h)2 = Old dist. Rotation of Axes Y P(x,y) y Consider a point P(x, y) Let the axes be rotated through an angle . X’ O X Let new P (X, Y) make x an angle with the new Y’ x-axis x y Y X cos , sin , sin , cos R R R R Rotation of Axes cos x y Y X , sin , sin , cos R R R R x R y sin cos cos sin R X Y x cos sin R R R cos cos sin sin X Y y sin cos R R R x X cos Y sin y X sin Y cos X x cos y sin Y y cos x sin Class Exercise Class Exercise - 1 If the segments joining the points A(a,b) and B(c,d) subtend an angle at the origin, prove that cos a 2 ac bd b2 c2 d2 Solution Let O be the origin. OA2 = a2+b2, OB2 = c2+d2, AB2 = (c-a)2+(d-b)2 Using Cosine formula in OAB, we have AB2 = OA2+OB2-2OA.OBcos c a d b a2 b2 c2 d2 2 2 2 On simplifying, cos a 2 a ac bd b2 c 2 d2 2 b2 c2 d2 cos Class Exercise - 2 Four points A(6,3), B(-3,5), C(4,-2) and D(x,3x) are given such that DBC 1 Find x. ABC 2 Solution : Given that ABC = 2DBC 6 3 4 3 1 5 1 2 3 2 1 x 4 3x 1 5 1 2 1 6 5 2 3 4 3 1 6 20 2 x 5 2 3x 4 3 1 6 20 2 28x 14 49 49 28x 14 2 x 11 3 or x 8 8 Class Exercise - 3 If a b c, prove that (a,a2), (b,b2) and (c,c2) can never be collinear. Solution : Let, if possible, the three points be collinear. a a2 1 1 b b2 1 0 2 c c2 1 R2 R2-R1, R3 R3- R2 a 2 a 1 b a b2 a2 0 0 c b c2 b2 0 a a2 1 b a c b 1 b a 0 0 1 c b 0 Solution Cont. R2 R2-R3 a a2 1 b a c b 0 a c 0 0 1 cb 0 b a c b c a 0 This is possible only if a = b or b = c or c = a. But a b c. Thus the points can never be collinear. Q.E.D. Class Exercise - 4 Three vertices of a parallelogram taken in order are (a+b,a-b), (2a+b,2a-b) and (a-b,a+b). Find the fourth vertex. Solution : Let the fourth vertex be (x,y). Diagonals bisect each other. a b a b 2a b x a b a b 2a b y and 2 2 2 2 the required vertex is (-b,b) Class Exercise - 5 If G be the centroid of ABC and P be any point in the plane, prove that PA2+PB2+PC2=GA2+GB2+GC2+3GP2. Solution : Choose a coordinate system such that G is the origin and P lies along the X-axis. Let A (x1,y1), B (x2,y2), C (x3,y3), P (p,0) LHS = (x1-p)2+y12+(x2-p)2+y22+(x3-p)2+y32 = (x12+y12)+(x22+y22)+(x32+y32)+3p2-2p(x1+x2+x3) =GA2+GB2+GC2+3GP2 =RHS Q.E.D. Class Exercise - 6 The locus of the midpoint of the portion intercepted between the axes by the line xcos+ysin = p, where p is a constant, is 1 1 4 (a) x2 y2 4p2 (b) 2 2 2 x y p 4 1 1 2 (c) x2 y2 2 (d) 2 2 2 p x y p Solution Let the line intercept at the axes at A and B. Let R(h,k) be the midpoint of AB. p p R h,k , 2 cos 2 sin sin p p , cos 2k 2h 1 1 4 p2 p2 2 2 1 Locus 2 2 2 x y p 4k 4h Ans : (b) Class Exercise - 7 A point moves so that the ratio of its distance from (-a,0) to (a,0) is 2:3. Find the equation of its locus. Solution : Let the point be P(h,k). Given that h a k 2 2 h a k 2 2 2 3 h a k 2 2 h a k2 2 h2 2ah a2 k2 4 2 2 2 9 h 2ah a k 5h2 26ah 5k2 5a2 0 the required locus is 5x2 26ax 5y2 5a2 0 4 9 Class Exercise - 8 Find the locus of the point such that the line segments having end points (2,0) and (-2,0) subtend a right angle at that point. Solution : Let A (2,0), B (-2,0) Let the point be P(h,k). Given that PA2 PB2 AB2 2 2 2 h 2 k 2 h 2 k 2 2 2 2h2 2k2 8 16 the required locus is x2 y2 4 Class Exercise - 9 Find the coordinates of a point where the origin should be shifted so that the equation x2+y2-6x+8y-9 = 0 will not contain terms in x and y. Find the transformed equation. Solution : Let the origin be shifted to (h,k). The given equation becomes (X+h)2+(Y+k)2-6(X+h)+8(Y+k)-9 = 0 Or, X2+Y2+(2h-6)X+(2k+8)Y+(h2+k2-6h+8k-9) = 0 2h-6 = 0; 2k+8 = 0 h = 3, k = -4. Thus the origin is shifted to (3,-4). Transformed equation is X2+Y2+(9+16-18-32-9) = 0 Or, X2+Y2 = 34 Class Exercise - 10 Through what angle should the axes be rotated so that the equation 11x2+4xy+14y2 = 5 will not have terms in xy? Solution : Let the axes be rotated through an angle . Thus equation becomes 11 X cos Y sin 4 X cos Y sin X sin Y cos 2 14 X sin Y cos 5 2 Solution Cont. Or, 11cos2 4 sin cos 14 sin2 X 11sin 4 cos2 6 sin cos 4 sin2 XY 2 4 sin cos 14 cos2 5 2 cos2 3 sin cos 2 sin2 0 cos 2 sin 2 cos sin 0 tan 1 or tan 2 2 Therefore, the required angle is tan1 1 or tan1 2 2 Thank you