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Help with a coordinate geometry question. (1 Viewer)

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Here is the question:
Find the equations of the four circles which are tangent to the x-axis, the y-axis, and the line x + y = 2.
I don't really know where to start. Thanks!
 

calamebe

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Yeah, and to get the other two you make the centre (-r,r) and (r,-r). Here's my working: m.imgur.com/jKM4MDC sorry for the bad quality.

Edit: I'll just explain why the two other centres are (-r,r) and (r,-r). Though the line x+y-2=0 only passes through the 1st, 2nd and 4th quadrants, then the circle can only be a tangent to the line in those quadrants.
 
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braintic

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Alternatively:

For the two circles in the 1st quadrant, the equation must be of the form:
(x-r)² + (y-r)² = r² since they touch the axes.

Substituting y=2-x and rearranging into a quadratic in x gives:
2x² - 4x + (a-2)² = 0

The discriminant is 16 - 8(a-2)².
Setting this to zero so that there is only one root (ie. one point of intersection with y=2-x) gives the required answer.

Repeat for the other two cases, where the circle has the form:
(x-r)² + (y+r)² = r²
(where r will be negative for the 2nd quadrant circle)
 

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