Conics question and does anyone have sk patel worked solutions? (1 Viewer)

mysterymarkplz

Active Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2013
Messages
235
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
The question is,
3)V and V' are the feet of the perpendiculars from S and S' respectively to the tangent at P(X1, Y1) to the ellipse 4x^2 + 9y^2 = 36.
Prove that:
a) SV.S'V' = 4
b)V and V' lie on the auxiliary circle x^2 + y^2 = 9

I used a really dodgy method of doing this question, I put the tangent at the point 0,2 and then get the coordinates of V and V' then i solved a and b from there, am i allowed to do this in the test i mean i'm not assuming anything i did put it on a known point on the ellipse but my method seems really weird. Is there any other way to do this question?
 

Carrotsticks

Retired
Joined
Jun 29, 2009
Messages
9,494
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
For (a):

1. Express tangent in general form.

2. Find coordinates of foci.

3. Use perpendicular distance formula twice, one to find SV and another to find S'V'.

4. Multiply the two distances, a lot will cancel out.

For (b):

Consider the following diagram.



1. Prove that triangle PVS is congruent to triangle PVT (thus SV = VT)

2. Prove that triangle OSN is similar to triangle S'TS (use SAS since SV/ST is already in ratio 1/2 and so is SO/SS')

3. Prove that S'T = 6 (using PS + PS' = 2a, but PS = PT so PT + PS' = 2a)

4. By similar triangle ratios, OV/S'T = 1/2, but S'T = 6, so OV = 3 (hence lies on circle x^2+y^2=9)

5. Similarly, for OV' = 3, hence V and V' lie on the circle x^2+y^2=9.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top