Math, asked by Brainly9b78, 1 year ago

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When two parallel tangents drawn of a circle to meet a third tangent, how do you prove that the sum of interior angles of a transversal is equal to 180?

Answers

Answered by siddhartharao77
19

Step-by-step explanation:

Two parallel tangents of a circle and third tangent intersects at P & Q.

From figure:

AQBP is a quadrilateral.

⇒ ∠A + ∠B = 90 + 90 = 180

{Radius through point of contact is perpendicular to tangent}

⇒ ∠A + ∠B + ∠P + ∠Q = 360°

⇒ 180° + ∠P + ∠Q = 360°

⇒ ∠P + ∠Q = 180°

Now,

⇒ ∠APO = ∠OPQ = (1/2) ∠P

// ∠BQO = ∠PQO = (1/2) ∠Q

∴ 2∠OPQ + 2∠PQO = 180°

Hope it helps!

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Topperworm: Great answer dear
siddhartharao77: Thanks dear
Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

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Step-by-step explanation:

Two parallel tangents of a circle and third tangent intersects at P & Q.

AQBP is a quadrilateral.

⇒ ∠A + ∠B = 90 + 90 = 180

{Radius through point of contact is perpendicular to tangent}

⇒ ∠A + ∠B + ∠P + ∠Q = 360°

⇒ 180° + ∠P + ∠Q = 360°

⇒ ∠P + ∠Q = 180°

⇒ ∠APO = ∠OPQ = (1/2) ∠P

∠BQO = ∠PQO = (1/2) ∠Q

  2∠OPQ + 2∠PQO = 180°

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