This MCQ module is based on: Introduction to Circles
Introduction to Circles
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Introduction to Circles
Targeting Class 9 level in Geometry, with Intermediate difficulty.
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5.1 Circles Around Us
Humans have always been captivated by the shapes that surround us. The earliest cave paintings — including those from Gorakhandi in Odisha — already show round and oval geometric patterns: triangles, squares, circles and ovals. Circles seem to have inspired humans long before language did.
Circles appear everywhere in nature. Ripples on still water move outward as perfect circles. The cross-section of a tree trunk or a sunflower's seed-bearing disc is circular. The full Moon? and the Sun (during a total solar eclipse) appear circular too.
5.2 Symmetries of a Circle
Take a paper plate (or trace a bangle). Cut along any straight line that passes through the centre. Both halves overlap exactly — so the line is a line of symmetry. In fact, every straight line through the centre is a line of symmetry, and a circle has infinitely many lines of reflection symmetry.
2. What is the length of the longest chord in a circle of radius 5 units? Is there a smallest chord?
3. The locus of points at a given distance from a given point is a circle. What can we say about the locus of points equidistant from two given points?
5.3 How Many Circles?
How many circles can be drawn through one given point? Through two points? Through three?
- One point A: Infinitely many circles pass through A — every centre at every distance gives a different circle.
- Two points A and B: Infinitely many. The centre of any such circle is equidistant from A and B, so it lies on the perpendicular bisector of AB.
- Three points A, B and C: If the three points are collinear, no circle can pass through all three. If they are non-collinear, exactly one circle passes through them.
Why? Let O be the centre of such a circle. Then OA = OB, so O lies on the perpendicular bisector of AB. Similarly, O lies on the perpendicular bisector of BC. The two perpendicular bisectors meet at exactly one point because the points are non-collinear. So the centre — and hence the circle — is unique.
5.4 Parts of a Circle
Once a circle is drawn we can identify many useful parts. Each has a precise name and definition.
Radius: the fixed distance from the centre to any point on the circle (also the segment from centre to the circle).
Chord: a line segment whose endpoints are on the circle.
Diameter: a chord that passes through the centre. Diameter \(= 2 \times\) radius.
Arc: a continuous portion of the circle. Two points on a circle divide it into a minor arc and a major arc.
Sector: the region bounded by two radii and the arc between them (like a pizza slice).
Segment: the region bounded by a chord and an arc.
Concentric, Congruent and Equal Circles
Concentric circles share the same centre but have different radii — like the rings on a target board. Congruent circles have equal radii. They can be slid (translated) to overlap exactly. Two circles are equal precisely when they have the same radius.
- Fold the disc so that the curved edge meets itself — a sharp half-fold.
- Open it. The crease is a diameter.
- Fold again along a different direction. Open. A second diameter appears.
- Mark the point where the two creases cross.
The crossing point is the centre of the disc. Every diameter passes through the centre, so two non-parallel diameters always intersect there. This is one of the easiest ways to find a circle's centre experimentally.
5.5 Worked Examples
Competency-Based Questions
Assertion–Reason Questions
Reason (R): A diameter passes through the centre.
Reason (R): The perpendicular bisectors of two segments always meet at a unique point.
Reason (R): Every diameter is a line of reflection symmetry of the circle.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a circle in Class 9 Maths Chapter 5?
A circle is the set of all points in a plane that are at a fixed distance, called the radius, from a fixed point called the centre. The boundary itself is the circle, while the region it encloses is the circular disc.
What is the difference between a chord and a diameter?
A chord is a line segment whose two endpoints lie on the circle. A diameter is a special chord that passes through the centre. Every diameter is a chord, but only the longest chord — and any chord through the centre — is a diameter.
What is the difference between an arc and a chord?
A chord is the straight segment between two points on the circle. An arc is the curved path along the circle between the same two points. Every chord (other than a diameter) divides the circle into two unequal arcs: a major arc and a minor arc.
What is the difference between a sector and a segment of a circle?
A sector is the pizza-slice region bounded by two radii and the arc between them. A segment is the region bounded by a chord and the arc on one side of the chord. A sector includes the centre; a segment usually does not.
What is the relationship between radius and diameter of a circle?
The diameter d is exactly twice the radius r, so d = 2r and r = d/2. Both are measured in the same units, and both pass through the centre when drawn from boundary to boundary.
How are circles used in real life?
Wheels, gears, clock faces, pizza slices, satellite orbits, athletic tracks and the cross-section of pipes all use circles because their geometric properties — equal radii, smooth boundary, and symmetry — make rolling, sealing and uniform distribution natural.