Circles — $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$
From Pythagoras to the equation of a circle centred at the origin. Read radius off the equation, sketch the circle, and recognise circle equations on sight.
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A circle is the set of all points the SAME distance from the centre. Centred at the origin $(0, 0)$, a point $(x, y)$ on the circle of radius $r$ satisfies $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$ (Pythagoras). For $x^2 + y^2 = 49$: what is $r$? Where does the circle cross the $x$-axis and the $y$-axis?
The equation $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$ is just Pythagoras' theorem in disguise. Every point $(x, y)$ at distance $r$ from the origin sits on the circle.
The red circle $x^2 + y^2 = 25$ has $r^2 = 25$, so $r = 5$. Centre $(0, 0)$. The circle crosses the axes at $(5, 0)$, $(-5, 0)$, $(0, 5)$, $(0, -5)$. Note: $r$ is the SQUARE ROOT of the number on the right — not the number itself.
Know
- $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$ is a circle centred at $(0, 0)$ with radius $r$
- The right side is $r^2$, so take the square root to get $r$
- The circle crosses the axes at $(\pm r, 0)$ and $(0, \pm r)$
Understand
- Why the equation comes from Pythagoras: $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$ measures squared distance from the origin
- Why we need both $x^2$ and $y^2$ (one would give a parabola, not a circle)
- How to recognise a circle equation versus a parabola equation
Can Do
- Read the radius and centre from an equation
- Sketch a circle given its equation
- Test whether a given point lies on a circle
Wrong: Saying $x^2 + y^2 = 16$ has radius 16.
Right: Right side is $r^2 = 16$, so $r = \sqrt{16} = 4$.
Wrong: Calling $y = x^2$ a circle.
Right: $y = x^2$ is a PARABOLA. A circle needs BOTH $x^2$ AND $y^2$, with the same coefficient.
Given $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$, sketching is a 3-step ritual:
- Find $r$: Take the square root of the right side. e.g. $x^2 + y^2 = 36 \Rightarrow r = 6$.
- Plot the 4 axis points: $(\pm r, 0)$ and $(0, \pm r)$.
- Draw a smooth circle through them, centred at the origin.
For a quick check: pick a point ON the circle, sub it in. e.g. $(3, 4)$: $3^2 + 4^2 = 9 + 16 = 25$, so this point lies on $x^2 + y^2 = 25$.
Three checks for "is this a circle centred at the origin?":
- Both $x^2$ and $y^2$ present: yes / no?
- Same coefficient on both (and positive): e.g. both $+1$? If $x^2 + y^2 = c$ with $c > 0$, it's a circle.
- Right side is positive: $r^2 > 0$. If $r^2 = 0$, just the origin. If $r^2 < 0$, no real solutions.
$x^2 + y^2 = 25$: circle, $r = 5$. $y = x^2$: parabola. $x^2 - y^2 = 25$: not a circle (different signs — that's a hyperbola at extension level). $x^2 + y^2 = -4$: no real solutions.
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
- 1Find $r$$r^2 = 49 \Rightarrow r = \sqrt{49} = 7$.
- 2State centre and axis pointsCentre $(0, 0)$. Axis crossings: $(7, 0)$, $(-7, 0)$, $(0, 7)$, $(0, -7)$.
- 3SketchSmooth circle of radius 7 around the origin, through the four labelled points.Always take the square root — the radius is 7, not 49.
- 1Use the formCentre $(0, 0)$: $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$.
- 2Square the radius$r = 8 \Rightarrow r^2 = 64$.
- 3Write the equation$x^2 + y^2 = 64$.Going IN to the equation, you square the radius; going OUT, you take the square root.
- 1Compute $x^2 + y^2$$3^2 + 4^2 = 9 + 16 = 25$.
- 2Compare with $r^2$$x^2 + y^2 = 25 = r^2$.
- 3ConcludeEquality $\Rightarrow$ the point lies ON the circle.$<$ would mean inside; $>$ would mean outside.
Common Pitfalls
Circle equation
- $x^2 + y^2 = r^2$
- Centre $(0, 0)$
- Radius $r$
Reading $r$
- Right side is $r^2$
- $r = \sqrt{r^2}$
- Don't skip the square root
Sketch steps
- Find $r$
- Plot $(\pm r, 0)$, $(0, \pm r)$
- Smooth circle through 4 points
Point test
- $= r^2$: ON
- $< r^2$: INSIDE
- $> r^2$: OUTSIDE
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Brain Trainer · 4 problems
Four quick circle reads.
1 State the radius of $x^2 + y^2 = 100$.
$r^2 = 100$.$r = 10$2 Write the equation of the circle centred at the origin with radius 3.
$r^2 = 9$.$x^2 + y^2 = 9$3 Does $(0, 4)$ lie on $x^2 + y^2 = 16$?
$0 + 16 = 16 = r^2$.Yes (ON the circle)4 Is $(1, 2)$ inside or outside $x^2 + y^2 = 9$?
$1 + 4 = 5 < 9$.INSIDE
Quick Check · 5 questions
Show Your Working · 3 questions
Q6. For $x^2 + y^2 = 81$, state the centre, the radius, and the four axis crossings.
Q7. Write the equation of a circle centred at the origin which passes through the point $(6, 8)$.
Q8. For the circle $x^2 + y^2 = 25$, decide whether each of these points lies on, inside, or outside: (a) $(3, 4)$, (b) $(2, 2)$, (c) $(-5, 1)$. Show your substitution working for each.
Quick Check
1. C — $r = \sqrt{49} = 7$.
2. B — $r = 6 \Rightarrow r^2 = 36$. $x^2 + y^2 = 36$.
3. A — $5^2 + 12^2 = 169 = 13^2$, so $r = 13$.
4. D — $4 + 1 = 5 < 9$, inside.
5. B — only $x^2 + y^2 = 16$ has the right form with $r^2 > 0$.
Show Your Working Model Answers
Q6 (3 marks): $r^2 = 81 \Rightarrow r = 9$ [1]. Centre $(0, 0)$ [1]. Axis crossings $(9, 0)$, $(-9, 0)$, $(0, 9)$, $(0, -9)$ [1].
Q7 (3 marks): Since $(6, 8)$ lies on the circle, $r^2 = 6^2 + 8^2$ [1]. $= 36 + 64 = 100$ [1]. Equation: $x^2 + y^2 = 100$ (so $r = 10$) [1].
Q8 (3 marks): (a) $9 + 16 = 25 = r^2$, ON the circle [1]. (b) $4 + 4 = 8 < 25$, INSIDE [1]. (c) $25 + 1 = 26 > 25$, OUTSIDE [1].
Half Circles — Upper and Lower
Rearrange $x^2 + y^2 = 25$ to make $y$ the subject. (a) Show $y = \pm\sqrt{25 - x^2}$. (b) Explain why $y = \sqrt{25 - x^2}$ alone is the UPPER half of the circle (a semicircle). (c) What restrictions on $x$ are needed for $y$ to be a real number? (d) Sketch $y = \sqrt{25 - x^2}$ — what shape do you get?
Reveal solution
(a) $y^2 = 25 - x^2 \Rightarrow y = \pm\sqrt{25 - x^2}$. (b) The $+$ root only gives non-negative $y$, so it's the UPPER semicircle. (c) Need $25 - x^2 \geq 0 \Rightarrow x^2 \leq 25 \Rightarrow -5 \leq x \leq 5$. (d) Sketch is the upper half of the circle of radius 5, like a dome.
Equation
$x^2 + y^2 = r^2$
Centre
$(0, 0)$
Radius
$r = \sqrt{r^2}$
Axis points
$(\pm r, 0)$, $(0, \pm r)$
Point test
$< r^2$: in. $= r^2$: on. $> r^2$: out.
Origin
From Pythagoras
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