clintmyster
Prophet 9 FTW
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2007
- Messages
- 1,067
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2009
- Uni Grad
- 2015
it requires us to scan diagrams which is the gay thing!
Trebla,Trebla said:Not exactly "difficult" but...
Consider an isosceles triangle ABC with AB = AC with equal angles /_ABC = /_ACB = 80°.
A line is drawn from point B to point E on AC such that /_CBE = 20°.
Show that points A, B and E are concyclic.
where was it edited? If it is, then the same triviality applys?Trebla said:Edited
Its trivial that 3 non-collinear points are concyclic,Trebla said:Not exactly "difficult" but...
Consider an isosceles triangle ABC with AB = AC with equal angles /_ABC = /_ACB = 80°.
A line is drawn from point B to point E on AC such that /_CBE = 20°.
Show that points A, B and E lie on a circle with BC as a tangent to this circle.
Oh!addikaye03 said:think arg (z^n)=narg(z), and umm.. arg(z^n)=kpi, where K is 0, +-1,+-2,...
Draw PR, PA and PM in and let centre be Okurt.physics said:I will leave this difficult circle geometry
AB is a diameter of a circle, PQ is a chord of the circle, perpendicular to AB and nearer to B, cutting AB at V. M is any point on AV. QM produced cuts the circle at R. Show that /_RPA = /_MPA.
LOL, ur not following the rules, you gotta answer my Q first;bored of sc said:I tried doing the above question and falied.
Here's another from Fitzpatrick:
Two chords AB and CD of a circle meet when produced at a point P outside the circle. Prove that triangle ADP and triangle CBP are similar.
Since no one else bothered...lolokay said:Another question:
solve for x; (x+1)(x+2)(x+3)(x+4) = 8
This one is fairly easybored of sc said:Two chords AB and CD of a circle meet when produced at a point P outside the circle. Prove that triangle ADP and triangle CBP are similar.
haha CORRECT! Well done man. Glad to see you get there!bored of sc said:Oh!
You want the argument of zn to be kpi so the sin@ = 0 and thus 'i' disappears.
arg(z) = 75 and arg(zn) = kpi = narg(z) = 75n
So, 75n = kpi where k is any integer.
Now is it just guess and check?
k not 0 since n = 0, which isn't a positive integer
k not less than 0 since n < 0, which isn't a positive integer
k not less 5 since n is not an integer
k = 5 i.e. 75n = 5*180 = 900
n = 900/75 = 12
n = 12 is the smallest positive integer which makes the equation true
z12 = [rt2/2*cis75]12
= 64/4096 * cis900
= 1/64 * -1
= -1/64
*crosses fingers*
(x+1)(x+4)(x+2)(x+3) = 8lolokay said:Another question:
solve for x; (x+1)(x+2)(x+3)(x+4) = 8
Create tangents at A and Q, labelling their intersection Y.5647382910 said:Two circles (one large one small) touch internally at A. The tangent at a point P on the smaller circle cuts the larger circle at Q and R. Prove that AP bisects angle RAQ
i) (a+b)(a2-ab+b2)bored of sc said:New question:
(i) Factorise a3+b3
(ii) Hence, or otherwise, show that
(sin3@+cos3@)/(sin@+cos@) = (2-sin2@)/2
Its your turn to leave a questionlolman12567 said:i) (a+b)(a2-ab+b2)
ii) RHS= 2-2sin@cos@/2
= 1-sin@cos@
LHS=(sin@+cos@)(sin2@-sin@cos@+cos2@)/sin@+cos@
= sin2@-sin@cos@+cos2@
= 1-sin@cos@
LHS=RHS
.'. (sin3@+cos3@)/(sin@+cos@) = (2-sin2@)/2