Two Circles and a Limit
Trigonometric Solution

We are solving the Two Circles and a Limit problem:

A stationary circle of radius 3 is centered at (3, 0). Another circle of variable radius r is centered at the origin and meets the positive y-axis in point A. Let B be the common point of the two circles in the upper half-plane. Let E be the intersection of AB extended with the x-axis. What happens to E as r grows smaller and smaller?


This applet requires Sun's Java VM 2 which your browser may perceive as a popup. Which it is not. If you want to see the applet work, visit Sun's website at http://www.java.com/en/download/index.jsp, download and install Java VM and enjoy the applet.


Buy this applet
What if applet does not run?

The use of trigonometry was suggested by the NY math teacher Patrick Honner.

Let α = ∠AOB, with O standing for the origin. Then B = (r sinα, r cosα), so that the slope of AB is given by

(r cosα - r) / (r sinα) = - sin(α/2)/cos(α/2) = -tan(α/2) = tan(180° - α/2).

This means that ∠AEO = α/2. In the right ΔAOE, EO = r / tan(α/2).

But r is a function of α - r = r(α) - which can be determined from the stationary circle. Join B to F, the second end of the diameter. ΔOBF is right, OF = 6, and ∠OFB = α. It follows that r = OB = 6 sin(α).

Of course we also have

EO = r / tan(α/2) = 6 sin(α) / tan(α/2) = 12 cos²(α/2).

Clearly α and r tend to 0 simultaneously. So, as r tends to 0, cos²(α/2) tends to 1, while EO has the limit of 12.

Note

Patrick Honner came up with a different opening for the proof.

Let X be the center of the stationary circle. ΔABX is isosceles and OX = BX = 3, OB = r. Relative to that circle, angle AOB is bounded by a tangent and a chord, OB, that subtends the central angle OXB. Therefore, ∠OXB = 2α. Dropping a perpendicular from X onto OB, we immediately obtain OB/2 = 3sin(α), or r = 6 sin(α).

Limits in Geometry


|Contact| |Front page| |Contents| |Algebra| |Store|

Copyright © 1996-2015 Alexander Bogomolny

 49555291

Google
Web CTK