that was with straight lines. this is locus.lolokay said:didn't we solve pretty much that exact question in the other thread?
P(x,y)shaon0 said:Given the points A(1,4) and B(-3,2) find the equation of the locus such that angle APB is a right angle.
that one ^. it's locusshaon0 said:Help needed:
c) A(0,3) and B(-2,1), Given these points. Find the locus of the point P(x,y) so that APB is a right angle.
thanks a lot.tommykins said:P(x,y)
A(1,4)
B(-3,2)
Mpa * Mpb = -1
[(4-y)/(1-x)]*[(2-y)/(-3-x)] -1
(4-y)(2-y) = -(1-x)(-3-x)
8 - 4y - 2y + y^2 = -(-3-x+3x+x^2)
8-6y + y^2 = -(-3+2x+x^2) = 3 - 2x - x^2
x^2 + 2x + y^2 - 6y = -5
(x+1)^2 + (y-3)^2 = -5 + 1 + 9 = 5
Circle with centre (-1,3) and radius of sqrt5.
argh, didn't think of thatAffinity said:You should exclude points A and B from the circle though.. so it's a circle with 2 holes
Why?Affinity said:You should exclude points A and B from the circle though.. so it's a circle with 2 holes
because if point P=A or B, a right angle is not formedshaon0 said:Why?
point's don't have an angle or magnitude (i think that's the word)lolokay said:because if point P=A or B, a right angle is not formed
if you look at tommykins working, you'll see it involves dividing by 0