Overview

Tangents create right angles with radii and equal-length segments from the same external point.

Core Skills

Use Radius-Perpendicular Fact

The radius to the tangent point is perpendicular to the tangent line. This creates right triangles for length and angle chasing.

Use Equal Tangents

From an external point PP, tangents to the circle have equal lengths, so PA=PBPA=PB.

Combine with Power of a Point

If a secant and a tangent meet at PP, then PT2=PAPBPT^2=PA\cdot PB.

Key Ideas

  • Radius to a tangent point is perpendicular to the tangent.
  • Tangents from the same external point are equal in length.

Worked Example

Point PP is outside a circle, and tangents touch at AA and BB. Show PA=PBPA=PB.

Both are tangents from the same external point, so the lengths are equal.

More Examples

Example 1: Right Angle

If OO is the center and TT is a tangent point, what is OTB\angle OTB where TBTB is the tangent line?

9090^\circ.

Example 2: Tangent Length

If OP=13OP=13 and r=5r=5, find the tangent length from PP.

PT2=OP2r2=16925=144PT^2=OP^2-r^2=169-25=144, so PT=12PT=12.

Example 3: Secant-Tangent

If PA=4PA=4 and PB=9PB=9 on a secant from PP, find the tangent length.

PT=36=6PT=\sqrt{36}=6.

Strategy Checklist

  • Use the radius-perpendicular fact to build right triangles.
  • Apply equal tangents from the same point.
  • Use PT2=PAPBPT^2=PA\cdot PB when a secant is present.

Common Pitfalls

  • Confusing tangent segments with secant segments.
  • Forgetting that the tangent-radius angle is 9090^\circ.
  • Treating tangent lengths as diameters.

Practice Problems

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