Last updated at Feb. 14, 2025 by Teachoo
Theorem 9.6 Equal chords of a circle (or of congruent circles) are equidistant from the centre (or centres). Given : A circle with center at O. AB and CD are two equal chords of circle i.e. AB = CD & OX and OY are perpendiculars to AB & CD respectively. To Prove : OX = OY Proof : Since OX ⊥ AB Perpendicular from the center to the chord, bisects the chord AX = BX = (𝐴𝐵 )/2 Since OY ⊥ CD Perpendicular from the center to the chord, bisects the chord CY = DY = (𝐶𝐷 )/2 Now, given that AB = CD 𝐴𝐵/2 = 𝐶𝐷/2 AX = CY In ∆ AOX and ∆COY ∠OXA = ∠OYC OA = OC AX = CY ∴ ∆AOX ≅ ∆COY OX = OY Hence, Proved.
Theorems
Theorem 9.2 Important
Theorem 9.3 Important
Theorem 9.4
Theorem 9.5 Important You are here
Theorem 9.6
Theorem 9.7 Important
Theorem 9.8
Theorem 9.9 Important
Theorem 9.10
Theorem 9.11 Important
Angle in a semicircle is a right angle Important
Only 1 circle passing through 3 non-collinear points
About the Author
Davneet Singh has done his B.Tech from Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. He has been teaching from the past 15 years. He provides courses for Maths, Science and Computer Science at Teachoo