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AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307
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AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2

Slideshow 47, Mathematics

Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307

Page 2: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

OBJECTIVES

• Review circle properties• Learn some properties

regarding angles and circles

Page 3: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

THE CIRCLE

Let’s learn and recall some basic circle property names.

Centre (origin)

Radius

Tangent

Page 4: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

THE CIRCLEDiameter

Chord

Sector

Radii (plural of radius)

Centre (origin)Central

angleArc length

Page 5: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

CIRCLE PROPERTIESSo far we know…

A tangent is always 90o to its radius.

2a

a

An angle at the edge is half the angle at the centre.

b

a

For a cyclic quadrilateral, opposite angles add up to 180o.

Page 6: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 4For a triangle with the diameter of the circle as an edge, the opposite angle touching the circle’s edge is a right-angle.

You should have showed this before on the worksheet!

180o We can see this as a quadrilateral with an 180o

angle.

Page 7: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 5In circles, angles in the same segment are equal to one another.

2a

a

We know the central angle is twice the angle at the edge.a

The position at the edge makes no difference.So the angles at the edges are equal.

Page 8: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 5In circles, angles in the same segment are equal to one another.

aa

Be careful, nothing here is congruent! They are similar though. a

a

Page 9: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

ANSWERS

Page 10: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 6The last we’ll learn. An angle between the tangent and a chord is equal to the angle in the alternate segment.

𝑦

𝑥

First, label two we know are right-angles.Label .

90−𝑥 Internal angles in a triangle: 𝑦+90+90−𝑥=180

𝑦+180−𝑥=180𝑦−𝑥=0𝑦=𝑥

Page 11: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 6Actually, for this property to work, the chord doesn’t need to pass through the origin.

First add two radii. One that touches the tangent, the other that touches another vertex.

𝑥

𝑦2 𝑦90− 𝑦

90−𝑦

The triangle is isosceles. If one angle is , the other two are…180−2 𝑦

2=90−𝑦

Lastly on a line, we get .Simplifying this, we get .

Page 12: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

PROPERTY 6An angle between the tangent and a chord is equal to the angle in the alternate segment.

𝑥

𝑥

Page 13: AN INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLE THEOREMS – PART 2 Slideshow 47, Mathematics Mr Richard Sasaki, Room 307.

ANSWERS

b.

c.

2.

3.