obliviousninja
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^^^
I'm having trouble, and I think the answers are wrong.
I'm having trouble, and I think the answers are wrong.
Yea, thats pretty much the answers, my concern is just the second step. I dont understand how its isosceles?-Find PT, through Pythag, which gives you 2.05
-Then realise that the triangle which subtends alpha is isoceles as it has equal sides (tangent from external pt)
-Then bisect the triangle that holds alpha into two triangles, through taking a line from p to the centre of the circle, which gives equal triangles, thus bisecting alpha
-then using the length PT and tan rule and the fact that one of the bisected triangles is right angled, as tangent to radius subtends right angle, find r
As tangents from an external point are equal (circle geo), meaning two sides are equal and isoceles triangleYea, thats pretty much the answers, my concern is just the second step. I dont understand how its isosceles?
How do we know they are tangents?As tangents from an external point are equal (circle geo), meaning two sides are equal and isoceles triangle
For the second step, call the point X below P.How do we know they are tangents?
How can it be 90, if angle PXT=90For the second step, call the point X below P.
(the one 450 m below it)
Call the points where the tangents intersect the circle M and N.
We know that MX = NX, because tangents from external point are equal.
We know that angle PXM = angle PXN = 90 degrees, since X is directly beneath P.
Therefore, due to Pythagoras theorem
PM^2 = PX^2 + XM^2
PN^2 = PX^2 + XN^2
Since, XM = XN, therefore PM = PN
Therefore the triangle is isosceles.
Why not?How can it be 90, if angle PXT=90