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This problem builds on Triangles in Circles and Subtended Angles . It leads to the theorem about right-angles in circles.
Teachers may find the article Angle Measurement: An Opportunity For Equity to be of interest.
If students will be working on paper ask them to draw right-angled triangles on their 9-peg and 12-peg circles. Alternatively, they could work on the interactive pegboard.
How many different triangles can they find?
How do they know they are right-angled?
What is special about the right-angled triangles?
Draw together conjectures which might mention the number of dots on the circle and the need to be able to join two points to form a diameter. Challenge students to justify these conjectures with convincing arguments. Eventually link this to the work on Subtended Angles .
What do we know already that might be useful here?
What is the relationship between the angle at the centre and the angle at the circumference?
What are the implications of our findings for circles in general (without dots)?
Students may need to spend more time convincing themselves when it is possible to make right-angled triangles. Here is a sheet with 10-peg, 12-peg and 16-peg circles to support them in investigating other cases.
Ask students to prove the general case.
Points A, B and C are the centres of three circles, each one of which touches the other two. Prove that the perimeter of the triangle ABC is equal to the diameter of the largest circle.
Two circles are enclosed by a rectangle 12 units by x units. The distance between the centres of the two circles is x/3 units. How big is x?
This gives a short summary of the properties and theorems of cyclic quadrilaterals and links to some practical examples to be found elsewhere on the site.