yesYea I thought of that too, but I can't find the unkown angle to find the sectors lol...
BTW can I assume that the lines drawn to A and B are perpendicular to it?
Yes you can. When the radius touches the point of contact of the tangent, it is perpendicular to the tangent.Yea I thought of that too, but I can't find the unkown angle to find the sectors lol...
BTW can I assume that the lines drawn to A and B are perpendicular to it?
That's 3uYes you can. When the radius touches the point of contact of the tangent, it is perpendicular to the tangent.
But the question can't be answered without that assumption, regardless of which course it is taught in.That's 3u
It can be done without that theorem. You just have to construct a line that meets the two radii at right angles (like carrot has done).But the question can't be answered without that assumption, regardless of which course it is taught in.
beastI did it in degrees since your profile says HSC 2014 ie: You don't know radians yet (but it would have made the working out nicer).
Carrotsticks just did...But the question can't be answered without that assumption, regardless of which course it is taught in.
O_O i thought circle geometry is year 10 lol?That's 3u
Some schools do it in year 10, but it's really only the basics iirc. You learn it in more depth in 3U.O_O i thought circle geometry is year 10 lol?
Lol no it's in the 3u prelim courseO_O i thought circle geometry is year 10 lol?
It can be done in year 10 5.3 at the end of the course.Lol no it's in the 3u prelim course
Oops. My mistake, sorry!Carrotsticks just did...
Actually, a capable student in year 9 could probably do it. I recall it being in the AMC paper on intermediate level.It can be done in year 10 5.3 at the end of the course.