Answer to Question #104244 in Analytic Geometry for Deepak Rana

Question #104244
The circle (x−1)
2 +y
2 = 1,z = 0 lies inside the sphere centred at the origin, and
having radius 2√
2.
1
Expert's answer
2020-03-02T09:32:04-0500

To prove that the circle {(x1)2+y2=1z=0\begin{cases} (x-1)^2+y^2=1 \\ z=0 \end{cases} lies inside sphere centred at the origin, and

having radius 2√2, we need to check that x2+y2+z2<(22)2x^2+y^2+z^2<(2\sqrt {2})^2 .

Proof:

{(x1)2+y2=1z=0,{x22x+1+y2=1z=0,{x2+y2=2xz=0\begin{cases} (x-1)^2+y^2=1 \\ z=0 \end{cases}, \quad \begin{cases} x^2-2x+1+y^2=1 \\ z=0 \end{cases}, \quad \begin{cases} x^2+y^2=2x \\ z=0 \end{cases}

x2+y2+z2=2x+0=2xx^2+y^2+z^2=2x+0=2x

We know that (x1)2+y2=1 (x1)21 0x2(x-1)^2+y^2=1 \ \Rightarrow (x-1)^2\leq1 \ \Rightarrow 0\leq x\leq 2

So, we have x2+y2+z2=2x2×2=4<8=(22)2.x^2+y^2+z^2=2x\leq 2\times 2=4<8=(2\sqrt{2})^2.

Therefore, that circle lies in the sphere.



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