Four chords of a circle are arranged in such a way that they form a quadrilateral shape, the length of the chords are as follows.
6cm, 7cm, 8cm and 9cm.
what is the area of the circle that will intersect all of the points?
Ok, I still don’t have a proof, but here are my thoughts so far.
First, in order to have a circle that contains a chord of length 9, the diameter of the circle must be at least 9 (so the radius must be at least 4.5).
Second, I made an approximation to get me in the right ballpark. Ok, imagine the perfect circle, with these 6, 7, 8, 9 chords in them making a quadrilateral. Draw a line from each of the four vertices to the center of the circle. Now we have 4 pie slices of the circle, each with a different angle at the center of the circle. My approximation is that the angles are proportional to the chord lengths. So calling the angles of the cords a, b, c and d, I should see that 6:7:8:9 and a:b:c:d are in the same proportions. Well, 6+7+8+9 = 30 and a+b+c+d = 360. So the factor difference is 360/30 = 12. So a:b:c:d = 6*12 : 7*12 : 8*12 : 9*12 = 72:84:96:108.
Using those approximated angles, and looking at right triangles made by the center of the circle, the midpoint of a chord, and an endpoint of that chord, I get the following relationships. R*sin(a/2)=6/2, R*sin(b/2)=7/2, R*sin(c/2)=8/2 and R*sin(d/2)=9/2. I get that R is about 5.1039-5.5623. So that’s my ballpark.
Third, I started to go into detail with equations. I thought they made plenty of sense, but then everything got screwy and I don’t know what I did. I used those same 4 equations: R*sin(a/2)=6/2, R*sin(b/2)=7/2, R*sin(c/2)=8/2 and R*sin(d/2)=9/2. Then I solved for the angle in each case, so I had a=2*sin-1(6/(2r)), b=2*sin-1(7/(2r)), c=2*sin-1(8/(2r)) and d=2*sin-1(9/(2r)). Knowing that a+b+c+d = 360 degrees (or 2*pi), I have one equation with one unknown:
a+b+c+d = 2*sin-1(6/(2r)) + 2*sin-1(7/(2r)) + 2*sin-1(8/(2r)) + 2*sin-1(9/(2r)) = 360 = 2*pi
sin-1(3/r) + sin-1(3.5/r) + sin-1(4/r) + sin-1(4.5/r) = 180 = pi
I didn’t know anything neat to do at this point, so I put the equation into excel and did my little zeroing in thing. I got a completely wrong answer though. I got R = 4.242640687. I know this is wrong on so many levels. First, it is less than 4.5 which I said was the minimum. A chord of length 9 can’t fit in this circle. Second, it’s not in my 5.1039-5.5623 ballpark. And third, all of the angles are 90 degrees! That’s impossible. That means all the chords should be identical in length. Then when I go back and plug 90 degrees in I get different radii. So I don't know what I screwed up (and no, I didn't get my radians and degrees confused... I think).
Then I mocked it up in a CAD program, where the lengths were fixed, and the endpoints were fixed on a circle. Then I could change the radius of the circle they were on and zero in on an answer. That’s how I got my R = 5.363825 solution.
I hope someone is more enlightened than I am =)
Oh wait... I think it might have to do with some of the angles being obtuse and messing up the inverse sine. I'll check into that and get back to you.
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Posted by nikki
on 2005-01-12 16:51:38 |