Hard SAT Math Question YOU Must Know! - Geometry of Circles (2024)

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @HeadMemeGuy
    @HeadMemeGuy 11 годин тому +1

    Hey do you know which subreddit this question is from or do you know any subreddits that post harder questions? Thanks!

  • @fortnitesweatkid
    @fortnitesweatkid 15 днів тому

    this is the perfect example to use desmos

  • @britishYES
    @britishYES 24 дні тому +1

    why are u assuming the intersctioon should be at the same value of x of each circles just bcs of one lined? like it could be anywhere for example when it's sloping

    • @DrewWerbowski
      @DrewWerbowski  24 дні тому

      Not assuming, just noticing that is a possible solution and should be easier to solve than if its centre were at a different x-value

    • @britishYES
      @britishYES 24 дні тому

      @@DrewWerbowski hmm thx for letting me answered

    • @OverclockingCowboy
      @OverclockingCowboy 23 дні тому

      @@britishYES
      Watch the Desmos simulation at 0:50. The second circle is not going to intersect the first circle at an angle. In order to fully understand this, you need to study how “a” affects the given equation (size and positioning).

  • @emilyjackson6962
    @emilyjackson6962 28 днів тому

    This is really good. Helped a lot.

  • @oyeitsmilangaming7386
    @oyeitsmilangaming7386 26 днів тому +1

    We can simply get 1 by comparing with each other .

    • @jooniespie
      @jooniespie 26 днів тому

      could you pls explain how

    • @OverclockingCowboy
      @OverclockingCowboy 26 днів тому

      What if the second equation is
      x^2 + y^2 - ax + 3y + 1 = 0

  • @jooniespie
    @jooniespie 26 днів тому

    could you please explain the algebraic way of solving it too?

    • @DrewWerbowski
      @DrewWerbowski  26 днів тому +2

      The distance between the centres should equal the sum of the circles radii. This should give you an equation to solve for a

    • @jooniespie
      @jooniespie 25 днів тому

      ​@@DrewWerbowskigot it, thanks!! im getting two solutions though, 1 and 5, both of them are within the lim too

    • @OverclockingCowboy
      @OverclockingCowboy 25 днів тому

      @@jooniespie
      It looks like you are trying to get a perfect SAT score. Very few people would be interested in solving this problem algebraically, specially with Desmos.
      a = 5 does not make any sense. It has radius 2.5 and center (2.5, -1). You can draw the circle. It does not intersect the first circle at one point.
      (a/2 - 1/2)^2 + (1)^2 = (a/2 + 1/2)^2
      (a - 1)^2 - (a + 1)^2 = - 4
      - 4a = -4
      a = 1
      I am doing this for fun only. Do not be surprised.

  • @johnziyadeh5489
    @johnziyadeh5489 22 дні тому

    This is really easy to solve with Desmos. Just plug both of the equations into Desmos and use a slider for "a". Given that "a" is greater than -5 but less than 10, it narrows down the values of what "a" could be.

    • @DrewWerbowski
      @DrewWerbowski  22 дні тому +1

      Yep, addressed this in the first part of the video.