1 / 16

Day 72: Circles

Day 72: Circles. Getting dizzy yet?. Recap. Radius Diameter Circumference Pi Area Central Angle Arc Arc Measure Arc Length Sector Area of a Sector Inscribed Angle Semicircle Tangent/Radius Diameter/Chord Intersecting Chords Intersecting Secants Tangent/Secant Tangent/Tangent.

erv
Download Presentation

Day 72: Circles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Day 72:Circles Getting dizzy yet?

  2. Recap • Radius • Diameter • Circumference • Pi • Area • Central Angle • Arc • Arc Measure • Arc Length • Sector • Area of a Sector • Inscribed Angle • Semicircle • Tangent/Radius • Diameter/Chord • Intersecting Chords • Intersecting Secants • Tangent/Secant • Tangent/Tangent

  3. Circle Constructions • Constructing a circle with a given radius • Copy the radius with your compass, place the point down, and spin it all the way around. • Finding a circle’s center. • This relies on the fact that a radius bisects a chord if and only if they are perpendicular. (See video) • Constructing a circle given three points. • Any three non-collinear points are concyclic (lie on the same circle), and a unique circle can be constructed through them. We are basically going to find the circumcenter of the triangle formed by the points. (See video) • Tangent to a point on the circle. • Remember a tangent is always perpendicular to a radius, so we’ll construct the perpendicular bisector to a segment that contains the radius. (See video) • Tangent(s) to a point outside the circle. • There will be two of these, and they are congruent. • Challenge problem: look up constructing an inscribed hexagon. • Extra-challenge problem: look up constructing an inscribed pentagon

  4. Equation of a Circle • A circle can be represented algebraically (as an equation of two variables). • For any circle with its center at the origin ((0,0) on the coordinate plane), its equation is: x2 + y2 = r2 where r is the radius.

  5. x2 + y2 = r2 • Does this formula seem familiar to anyone? • Something squared plus something squared equals something squared? • The formula for a circle is based on the Pythagorean Theorem.

  6. Circles and the Pythagorean Theorem • Let’s pick some radius r. • To find the coordinates of the endpoint, count x over and y up. • So by the Pythagorean Theorem… • x2 + y2 = r2 • What if the radius pointed in a different direction? • We get the same equation. • What if we considered all of the radii? • So the equation represents all of the (x, y) values that are a given distance away from the center, which is also the definition of a circle. r x y x y

  7. Graphing a Circle • What is the radius for the following circle? x2 + y2 = 9 • Plot 4 points based on the radius and draw the circle. • The circle represents all the values for x and y that make the equation true.

  8. Example • What is the equation of this circle? • x2 + y2 = 4

  9. Shifting the Circle • Not all graphed circles have their centers at the origin. • The general equationof a circle with center (h, k) is (x – h)2 + (y – k)2 = r2 • Note: The center has the opposite sign of h and k. • Answer: (x – 1)2 + y2 = 1

  10. Example • What is the equation for this circle? • Find the center andradius. • Plug the center intothe equation withthe signs switched. • Plug in the radius. • (x – 2)2 + (y + 3)2 = 16

  11. Example • Graph the following circle: (x – 3)2 + (y – 1)2 = 4 • Plot the center. • Use the radius toplot 4 points.

  12. Find the center and radius of the circle

  13. Find the Equation of the Circle

  14. Find the Equation of the Circle Find the equation of a circle with: • center at (1, 2) and a point on the circle is (4, 3) • center at (3, -1) and a point on the circle is (5, 5) • a diameter with end points of (-4, 6) and (6, 2)

  15. Find the Equation of the Circle • Find the equation of a circle that passes through A(1, 2), B(-3, 4), and C(-5, 0). • Remember that the perpendicular bisectors of chords will meet at the center. • The center will be equidistant from all three points.

  16. Homework 45 • Workbook, p. 137 • Handout: Circles & Tangents

More Related