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Chapter 10 Circles 10.1 Circles and Circumference Definitions A circle is the locus of all points in a plane equidistant from a given point called the center of the circle. The circle is named after the center point and can be written as OA if A is the center point. A Center - Point A Parts of Circles Chord – A segment with two endpoints on the circle. B BC is a chord Diameter (d) – A chord that contains the center point. BD is a diameter C A Radius (r) – A segment that contains the center point and D any point on the circle. There are an infinite # AD & AB are radii of each of these parts. Radii and Diameters o Since there are an infinite number of points on a circle, there can be an infinite number of radii (r), diameters (d) and chords. o We know that a diameter contains two radii and since all the points on a circle are equidistant from the center point, all radii are congruent. o The diameters are twice the radius. (d = 2r or r = ½ d. Circumference o The circumference is the distance around the circle just like the perimeter of any polygon. o The Greeks noticed that for every circle the ratio of the Circumference/Diameter was always the same. They gave that ratio a special name. o Pi (π) which can be abbreviated as 3.14 or 22/7. Pi is an irrational number, meaning it is a non-repeating, non-terminating decimal. Circumference (Con’t) o So, π=C/d (Circumference/diameter) we can solve for C, o C = πd and since d = 2r o C = 2πr o Using these two formulas we can find the exact circumference of a circle given either the radius or the diameter. o Ex. If d = 4, the C = 4π exactly or approx 12.57 10.2 Angles and Arcs Angles of Circles o There are four different types of angles associated with circles: o Central Angles o Inscribed Angles o Interior Angles o Exterior Angles o Central Angle – An angle with the vertex on the center of the circle and the sides are radii. Central Angle Central Angle – An angle where the vertex is the center of the circle and the sides are radii. CAB is a central angle Sum of Central Angles – The sum of all central angles equals 360° B C m CAB m BAD m DAC 360 A D Arcs o An Arc is a portion of a circle o There are three types of arcs in a circle: o Minor Arc o Major Arc o Semicircle o One central angle divides a circle into two arcs, one minor and one major. o The sum of all minor arcs equals 360° Arcs (Con’t) <CAB is a Central Angle CB is a minor arc mCB m CAB The remaining arc is the major arc. BDC is a major arc mCB mBDC 360 B C A D Semicircle BC is a diameter CB is a semicircle B CDB is a semicircle A mCB mCDB 180 D C Arc Addition Postulate B <CAB and <DAC are adjacent, central angles. The AAP says: m<CAB + m<DAC = m<DAB Since <CAB, <DAC and <DAB are central angles, the measurement of the intercepted arcs are equal to the angle. C A D mCB mDC mDB Congruent Arcs If <CAB and <DAC are congruent angles, then the arcs are congruent. Def of Congruent angles says: m<CAB = m<DAC B C Def of Central angles says the D measurement of the arc equals the measurement of the central angle. A BC CD Arc Length The length of the arc is a portion of the circumference. It is not the measurement of the arc which is measured in degrees. B C It is the ratio of the measurement of the arc over 360 times the circumference. A mBC length BC *2 r 360 Example mBC BC *2 r 360 30 BC * 2 (6) 360 1 BC *12 12 B C A Find the exact length of arc BC if m<BAC is 30° and r =6 10.3 Arcs and Chords Theorem 10.2 o In a circle or in congruent circles, if two chords are congruent, then the arcs of the chords are congruent. o In a circle or in congruent circles, if two arcs are congruent, then the chords that make those arcs are congruent. A B Proof of Thrm 10.2 Given : AB CD A Draw radii EA, EB , EC and ED EA EB EC ED B b / c all radii are E ECD EAB by SSS ECD EAB C D by CPCTC CD AB Circles and Polygons o We can discuss how circles and polygons are drawn together. o Circumscribed – If a circle is outside the polygon then the circle is said to be circumscribed about the polygon. o Inscribed – If a polygon is inside the circle then the polygon is said to be inscribed in a circle. Circles and Polygons B A E C D Quad ABCD is inscribed in Circle E. Circle E is Circumscribed about Quad ABCD. Same picture – notice all vertices of quad are on the circle. Thrm 10.3 o In a circle, if a diameter (or radius) is perpendicular to a chord, then it bisects the chord and the arc of the chord. B A C D E o Segment AD is congruent to Segment DC. o Arc AB is congruent to Arc BC. o DE is said to be the distance that chord AC is from the center of the circle. Theorem 10.4 o In a circle or congruent circles, two chords are congruent if they are equidistant from the center of the circle. o In a circle or congruent circles, two chords are equidistant from the center of the circle if they are congruent. Proof of Thrm 10.4 Two Congruent Chords. B C F A E Two radii perpendicular to two congruent chords. Two congruent radii. ΔECB congruent ΔEFD by HL. Seg CE congruent to seg EF by CPCTC. Seg AB & seg DG equidistant from the center. 10.4 Inscribed Angles Definition o An Inscribed angle is an angle with a vertex on the circle and the sides of the angles are chords. C o <CAB is an inscribed angle E A o Notice that the vertex, A is B on the circle and the sides are chords AC and AB. Measurement of Arc C E A B Unlike the central angle, the measurement of the arc is not equal to the meas. of the central angle. The measurement of the inscribed angle is ½ the meas. of the intercepted arc. 1 m CAB mBC 2 Thrm 10.6 o If two inscribed angles intercept the same or congruent arcs, then the angles are congruent. C C B G <A and <D intercept <A and <D intercept the same congruent arcs EtheseFangles arc (arc BC) so E B so (arc BC & arc GF) are congruent. these angles A A D are congruent. D Example: W 20° X 3 Y 4 2 40° 5 F U Z 1 T mUZ 108 Answers: m<1 = 48° m<2 = 20° m<3 = 54° m<4 = 106° m<5 = 54° What If? o What happens if an inscribed angle intercepts a semicircle? A E B oAll these angles are right angles! C oThen it is a right angle What if? o What if we had a quadrilateral inscribed in a circle, what can you say about opposite angles 1 of the quad? m C 2 1 m A mDCB 2 mDAB mDCB 360 A D E C mDAB B 2m A 2m C 360 m A m C 180 Opposite angles are supplementary! 10.5 Tangents Definition o A tangent is a line that touches a circle (curve) at exactly one point. o That point is the “Point of Tangency”. Tangent Line Point of Tangency (P.O.T.) E Theorem 10.9 o If a radius is drawn to the P.O.T., then it is perpendicular to the tangent line. Line AB is tangent to Circle E at A. A AE _|_ AB B E Theorem 10.10 o If a line is perpendicular to a radius of a circle at its endpoint, then the line is tangent to the circle. AE _|_ AB A B E Line AB is tangent to Circle E at A. Theorem 10.11 o If two segments from the same exterior point are tangent to the same circle, then the tangent segments are congruent. A AB is congruent to BC B E C Polygons and Circles o Remember when a polygon is inscribed in a circle all the vertices of the polygon were inscribed angles? o Here when a polygon is circumscribed about a circle (or a circle is inscribed in a polygon), then all segments are tangent segments. Four P.O.T. E Four Tangent Segments Example o ΔJKH is circumscribed about OE. Find the perimeter of the triangle if NK = JL + 29. 16 J 16 L M 18 E H 18 P = 2(16 + 18 + 45) = 158 16 + 29 = 45 N 16 + 29 = 45 K Common Tangents o A common tangent is a tangent that touches two circles at the same time. Common External Tangent. Common Internal Tangent 10.6 Secants, Tangents and Angle Measurement. Secant Definition o Secant – A line that crosses through a circle at two distinct points. o Secants contain chords. B A AB is a secant AB is a chord Interior Angles oInterior Angle – An angle where the vertex is in the interior of the circle and the sides are “portions” of chords. C A B E CBD is an D interior angle Exterior Angles oExterior Angle – An angle where the vertex is exterior of the circle and the sides are combinations of secants, tangents or both. C CBD is an A D B E exterior angle Interior Angle C A D B E Point B is in the interior of Circle <ABC, <CBD, <DBE and <EBA are all Interior Angles The measure of the Interior angle is equal to ½ the sum of the two intercepted arcs. 1 m CBD mCD m AE 2 Exterior Angle Two Secants C A D B E Point B is in the Exterior of Circle <B is an Exterior Angle The measure of the Exterior angle is equal to ½ the difference of the two intercepted arcs. 1 m B mCD m AE 2 Exterior Angle Secant Tangent C D B E Point B is in the Exterior of Circle <B is an Exterior Angle The measure of the Exterior angle is equal to ½ the difference of the two intercepted arcs. 1 m B mCD mCE 2 Exterior Angle Two Tangents C D B E Point B is in the Exterior of Circle <B is an Exterior Angle The measure of the Exterior angle is equal to ½ the difference of the two intercepted arcs. 1 m B mCDE mCE 2 Inscribed Angle o Another possible inscribed angle could be where you have a secant and a tangent. o The m< = ½ the measure of the intercepted arcs. B m<1 = ½ m Arc AB C m<2 = ½ m Arc BCA 2 1 A 10.7 Special Segments in a Circle Theorem 10.15 (PP) o If two chords intersect in a circle, then the products of the measures of the segments of the chords are equal. PP = PP B A E D (Part)(Part) = (Part)(Part) (AE)(EC) = (DE)(EB) C Confusing Part: PP looks like Interior Angle problem, Int <‘s looking for angles, here looking for segments. Proof of Thrm 10.15 E D A B A C B b / c? ADE ~ BCE b / c ? AE DE b / c? EB CE Draw auxiliary chords AD and BC. ( AE )(CE ) ( DE )( EB) b / c ? D C b/c? PP = PP Example A D 3 2 5 E PP = PP B (AE)(EC) = (DE)(EB) x C (2)(x) = (5)(3) x = (5)(3)/2 x = 15/2 Theorem 10.16 (WE=WE) B Be careful: This looks like Ext <‘s! E D A C WE=WE stands for Whole times Exterior (of one secant) = Whole times Exterior (of other secant). (DB)(DE) = (DC)(DA) Example B E D A C (EB) = x (DE) = 8 (AC) = 24 (DA) = 10 (DB)(DE) = (DC)(DA) (8x) = (276) (x+8)(8) = (34)(10) x = 34.5 (8x+64) = (340) Theorem 10.17 WE=TT B E D Be careful: This looks like Ext <‘s! C WE=TT stands for Whole times Exterior (of one secant) = Tangent times Tangent. (DB)(DE) = (DC)2 Example B E D C (EB) = x + 2 (DE) = x (DC) = x + 4 (x2 - 6x - 16) = 0 (DB)(DE) = (DC)2 (x – 8)(x + 2) = 0 (2x + 2)(x) = (x + 4)2 x = 8 (2x2 + 2x) = (x2 + 8x + 16) x = -2 10.8 Equations of Circles Equations o Just like you had to memorize the equation of a line, you have to memorize the equation of the circle. o Also, in y=mx + b, the m is the slope and the b is the y intercept. What is the x and y? o The x and the y were the portions of any point P(x,y) that was on the line. Equation of a Circle o To draw a line you need the slope and the y intercept. What do you need to draw a circle? o You need the center point and the radius. So those are the things you will have in the equation. o Equation of a circle: o (x – h)2 + (y – k)2 = r2 Equation of a Circle o Equation of a circle: o (x – h)2 + (y – k)2 = r2 o The h is the x part of the center, the k is the y part of the center and r is the length of the radius. o The center point C(h,k), r is the radius. o Does the equation of a circle look like anything you’ve seen before? d ( x2 x1 )2 ( y2 y1 )2 Identify the C and r of a Circle o (x – 3)2 + (y – 2)2 = 16 o What is the x part of the center? oh=3 o What is the y part of the center? ok=2 o What is the center C(h,k)? o C(3,2) or=4 9 Sketch (x – 3)2 + (y – 2)2 = 16 8 7 (3, 6) 6 5 r=4 r=4 4 3 (-1, 2) -6 -4 (7, 2) 2 1 -8 r=4 -2 C(3, 2) 2 4 -1 -2 -3 (3, -2) 6 8 10 Sketch (x – k)2 + (y – h)2 = r2 (h, k + r) r=r (h - r, k) (h + r, k) C(h, k) (h, k - r) Sketch (x – 3)2 + (y + 2)2 = 25 (3, 3) (-2,-2) r=5 (8, -2) C(3, -2) (3, -7) Sketch (x – 3)2 + (y + 2)2 = 5 (3, -2 + √5) r = √5 (3 - √5,-2) (3 + √5, -2) C(3, -2) (3, -2 -√5)