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NCERT Solutions Class 10 Maths Chapter 10 Circles

The document summarizes key properties about circles: 1) A circle can have infinitely many tangents. A tangent intersects a circle at one point, called the point of contact. A line intersecting a circle at two points is called a secant. 2) Tangents drawn from an external point to a circle form an angle that is supplementary to the angle subtended by the line segment joining the points of contact at the center. 3) The perpendicular at the point of contact between a tangent and a circle passes through the circle's center.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
186 views9 pages

NCERT Solutions Class 10 Maths Chapter 10 Circles

The document summarizes key properties about circles: 1) A circle can have infinitely many tangents. A tangent intersects a circle at one point, called the point of contact. A line intersecting a circle at two points is called a secant. 2) Tangents drawn from an external point to a circle form an angle that is supplementary to the angle subtended by the line segment joining the points of contact at the center. 3) The perpendicular at the point of contact between a tangent and a circle passes through the circle's center.

Uploaded by

Rekha Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

Exerise 10.1
1. How many tangents can a circle have?
Sol. A circle can have infinitely many tangents.

2. Fill in the blanks:


(i) A tangent to a circle intersects it in ________ point(s).
(ii) A line intersecting a circle in two points is called a
________ .
(iii) A circle can have ________ parallel tangents at the
most.
(iv) The common point of a tangent to a circle and the
circle is called ________ .
Sol. (i) one (ii) secant
(iii) two (iv) point of contact.
3. A tangent PQ at a point P of a circle of radius 5 cm meets
a line through the centre O at a point Q so that OQ = 12 cm.
Length PQ is:

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

(A) 12 cm (B) 13 cm (C) 8.5 cm (D) 119 cm.


Sol. (D).
4. Draw a circle and two lines parallel to a given line such
that one is a tangent and the other, a secant to the circle.
Sol. n

O
m

Here l is the given line. m and n are respectively, a


tangent and a secant to a given circle with centre O and
parallel to line l.

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

Exerise 10.2
In Q. 1 to 3, choose the correct option and give justification.
1. From a point Q, the length of the tangent to a circle is
24 cm and the distance of Q from the centre is 25 cm. The
radius of the circle is
(A) 7 cm (B) 12 cm (C) 15 cm (D) 24.5 cm.
T
Sol. r = (25)2 − (24)2 cm = 7 cm.
P
Option (A) is correct.
2. In figure, if TP and TQ are the
two tangents to a circle with 110°
centre O so that ∠ POQ = 110°, O
Q
then ∠PTQ is equal to
(A) 60° (B) 70°
(C) 80° (D) 90°.
Sol. Œ TQ and TP are tangents to a circle with centre O.
such that ∠ POQ = 110°
∴ OP ⊥ PT and OQ ⊥ QT
⇒ ∠OPT = 90 and ∠OQT = 90°
Now, in the quadrilateral TPOQ, we get

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

∴ ∠PTQ + 90° + 110° + 90° = 360°


⇒ ∠PTQ + 290° = 360°
⇒ ∠PTQ = 360° − 290° = 70°
Thus, the correct option is (B).
3. If tangents PA and PB from a point P to a circle with centre
O are inclined to each other at angle of 80°, then ∠POA is
equal to
(A) 50° (B) 60° (C) 70° (D) 80°.

1 1
Sol. ∠POA = ∠AOB = × 100° = 50°.
2 2
Option (A) is correct.
4. Prove that the tangents drawn at the ends of a diameter of
a circle are parallel.
Sol. In the figure, we have:
PQ is diameter of the given circle and O is its centre.
Let tangents AB and CD be drawn at the end points of the
diameter PQ.
Since the tangent at a point to a circle is perpendicular to
the radius through the point.
∴ PQ ⊥ AB ⇒ ∠APQ = 90°
C Q
D

A P B

And PQ ⊥ CD ⇒ ∠PQD = 90°


⇒ ∠APQ = ∠PQD

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

But they form a pair of alternate angles.


∴ AB y CD.
5. Prove that the perpendicular at the point of contact to the
tangent to a circle passes through the centre.
Sol. Let perpendicular at the point of contact to the tangent does
not pass through at centre.
O′P ⊥ PT ...(i) [Given]
Join OP. As OP is radius.
∴ OP ⊥ PT ...(ii) O O′

[Radius is perpendicular to tangent at


the point of contact] P T
From (i) and (ii), we get
OP and O′P are perpendicular to PT
⇒ OP and O′P must coincide.
As only one perpendicular can be drawn from a point on a
line.
Hence perpendicular from the point of contact, passes
through the centre.
6. The length of a tangent from a point A at distance 5 cm
from the centre of the circle is 4 cm. Find the radius of the
circle. T
4c
m
Sol. OT = 5 − 4
2 2
O A
5 cm
cm = 9 cm = 3 cm.
7. Two concentric circles are of radii 5 cm and 3 cm. Find the
length of the chord of the larger circle which touches the
smaller circle.
Sol. OA = 5 cm, OT = 3 cm
Also OT ⊥ AB, O

Therefore, AT = 25 − 9 cm = 4 cm A T B

∴ AB = 2AT = 8 cm.
8. A quadrilateral ABCD is drawn to circumscribe a circle (see
figure). Prove that
AB + CD = AD + BC

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

C
R

D
Q

A B
P
Sol. We have AS = AP; BP = BQ; CQ = CR and DR = DS.
Consider AB + CD = (AP + PB) + (CR + RD)
= AS + BQ + CQ + DS
= (AS + DS) + (BQ + CQ)
= AD + BC. Hence proved.
9. In figure, XY and X′Y′ are two X P Y
parallel tangents to a circle with A
centre O and another tangent
AB with point of contact C O
interesting XY at A and X′Y′ at C
B. Prove that ∠AOB = 90°. X′ Y′
Q B
Sol. Given: A circle with centre O
has three tangents XY, X′Y′ and X P A Y
1
AB at the points P, Q and C 2
respectively. Also XY || X′Y′. O
To prove: ∠AOB = 90° 3
C
4
Construction: Join OC, OP, OQ. X′ Q B Y′
Proof: In ∆AOP and ∆AOC,
PA = PC [Two tangents drawn from a point
outside the circle]
PO = CO [Radii of same circle]
AO = AO [Common]
Therefore, ∆AOP ≅ ∆AOC [SSS criterion)]
∴ ∠1 = ∠2 ...(i)
Similarly, we can prove that
∠3 = ∠4 ...(ii)

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

Now, ∠PAB + ∠QBA = 180° [Sum of interior angles on


the same side of transversal]
⇒ 2∠2 + 2∠3 = 180° [Using (i) and (ii)]
⇒ ∠2 + ∠3 = 90° [Sum of angles of a triangle
is 180°]
⇒ ∠AOB = 90°. Hence proved.
10. Prove that the angle between the two tangents drawn from
an external point to a circle is supplementary to the angle
subtended by the line-segment joining the points of contact
at the centre. A
Sol. ∠OAP = ∠OBP = 90° ...(i)
Also ∠AOB + ∠OBP + O P

∠BPA + ∠OAP = 360°


[Sum of angles of a B
quadrilateral is 360°]
⇒ ∠AOB + 90° + ∠BPA + 90° = 360°
⇒ ∠AOB + ∠BPA = 180°.
11. Prove that the parallelogram circumscribing a circle is a
rhombus. D
R
C
Sol. AB = CD and BC = DA ...(i)
S
AB + CD = AP + BP + CR + DR
= AS + BQ + CQ + DS Q

= AD + BC A B
P
⇒ 2AB = 2AD [Using (i)]
⇒ AB = AD
As adjacent sides of a A
parallelogram are equal.
∴ Parallelogram is a
rhombus.
12. A triangle ABC is drawn to
circumscribe a circle of
radius 4 cm such that the O

segments BD and DC into


which BC is divided by the
point of contact D are of C B
6 cm D 8 cm

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Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

lengths 8 cm and 6 cm respectively (see figure). Find the


sides AB and AC.
Sol. Let the circumcircle touches AB and AC at E and F
respectively.
Join OA, OB, OC, OE and OF.
A

Y
cm

cm
Y

E
F
O
8
6 cm

cm
4 cm

C B
6 cm D 8 cm
We have
OD = 4 cm = OE = OF [Radii]
Also CD = 6 cm = CF, BD = 8 cm = BE
and AE = AF = x cm [Say]
[... The lengths of the two tangents
from an external point to a circle are equal]
From figure,
ar(∆ABC) = ar(∆OAB) + ar(∆OBC) + ar(∆OCA) ...(i)
But ar(∆ABC) = s(s − a)(s − b)(s − c)
= (14 + x)(14 + x − 8 − x)(14 + x − 14)(14 + x − 6 − x)

'

 s=
AB + BC + CA 8 + x + 8 + 6 + 6 + x
= = 14 +

x
 2 2 
= (14 + x) 6 × x × 8 = 48 x (14 + x) .
1
ar(∆OAB) = × (8 + x) × 4 = 16 + 2x
2
1
ar(∆OBC) = (6 + 8) × 4 = 28
2
1
and ar(∆OCA) = (6 + x) × 4 = 12 + 2x
2

MathonGo 8
Class 10 Chapter 10 - Circles

Now, putting these values in eqn. (i), we have

48 x (14 + x) = (16 + 2x) + (28) + (12 + 2x)

⇒ 48 x (14 + x) = 56 + 4x = 4(14 + x)
⇒ 48x(14 + x) = 16(14 + x)2 [Squaring both sides]
⇒ 48x(14 + x) – 16(14 + x)2 = 0
⇒ 16(14 + x)(3x – 14 – x) = 0
⇒ 16(14 + x)(2x – 14) = 0
⇒ x = – 14, 7
Ignoring x = – 14 because length cannot be negative.
∴ x = 7 cm
Hence, AB = BE + AE = 8 + x = 8 + 7 = 15 cm
and AC = CF + AF = 6 + x = 6 + 7 = 13 cm.
13. Prove that opposite sides of a quadrilateral circumscribing
a circle subtend supplementary angles at the centre of the
circle.
R
D C
Sol. ∆AOP ≅ ∆AOS
[As AP = AS, OP = OS,
6 5
AO is common] 7O 4
3 Q
∠1 = ∠8 8 1 2
S
Similarly ∠2 = ∠3
B
∠4 = ∠5
A P
∠6 = ∠7
⇒ ∠1 + ∠2 + ∠3 + ∠4 + ∠5 + ∠6 + ∠7 + ∠8 = 360°
⇒ 2∠1 + 2∠2 + 2∠6 + 2∠5 = 360°
⇒ (∠1 + ∠2) + (∠6 + ∠5) = 180°
⇒ ∠AOB + ∠COD = 180°
Similarly, we can show
∠AOD + ∠BOC = 180°

MathonGo 9

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