A tangent to a circle touches the circle at precisely one point. We call this point the point of contact, or point of tangency.
Tangents also make angles with chords, and the angles they make are equal to the angles the chords form in alternate segments:
We will now prove that the angle between a tangent and a chord drawn to the point of contact is equal to the angle in the alternate segment.
In the diagram below, AC is a tangent to the circle with centre O:
Solve for x. Show all working and reasoning.
In the given diagram, CD is a tangent to the circle:
Prove that CD^{2} = CA \times CB using similar triangles.
In the diagram, chords AB and DC are produced to an external point P at which they intersect:
Prove that PB \times PA = PC \times PD using similar triangles.
In the diagram, points A, B, C and D lie on a circle, and AC and BD intersect at point E:
Prove that AE \times EC = BE \times ED using similar triangles.