Math, asked by Anonymous, 5 months ago

Prove that the tangents drawn at the ends of a diameter of a circle are parallel

Answers

Answered by Remi14
3

Answer:

Let AB be a diameter of the circle. Two tangents PQ and RS are drawn at points A and B respectively.

Radius drawn to these tangents will be perpendicular to the tangents.

Thus, OA ⊥ RS and OB ⊥ PQ

∠OAR = 90º

∠OAS = 90º

∠OBP = 90º

∠OBQ = 90º

It can be observed that

∠OAR = ∠OBQ (Alternate interior angles)

∠OAS = ∠OBP (Alternate interior angles)

Since alternate interior angles are equal, lines PQ and RS will be parallel

hope \: it \: helps \: u...............

Answered by dilliprasaddhakal528
0

I hope this answer in figure helps you.

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