ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Geometry and Measurement Videos 48 videos

SAT Math 10.1 Geometry and Measurement
327 Views

SAT Math 10.1 Geometry and Measurement. How many cans of paint are needed?

SAT Math 3.3 Geometry and Measurement
188 Views

SAT Math 3.3 Geometry and Measurement

SAT Math 6.1 Geometry and Measurement
3974 Views

SAT Math 6.1 Geometry and Measurement

See All

SAT Math 5.4 Geometry and Measurement 235 Views


Share It!


Description:

SAT Math 5.4 Geometry and Measurement

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here’s your shmoop du jour, brought to you by chords.

00:06

Let’s make sweet, sweet music together.

00:09

The diameter of this circle is 14.

00:12

Lines JN and MK are perpendicular to each other.  What is the length of the chord JK? 

00:20

And here are the potential answers...

00:25

We’re not sure where this circle is headed, but given the bow tie, it must be someplace fancy.

00:31

Okay, so this problem makes a big deal out of the fact that JN and MK are perpendicular…

00:36

What do the lines’ perpendicularity tell us?

00:38

It tells us that, because L is the midpoint of the circle…

00:41

…angle JLK is, by rule, a right angle.

00:45

The diameter of the circle is 14, which makes each radius 7…

00:48

…so we now also know the length of both JL and KL.

00:52

And whaddya know…by looking at our clock, it appears to be Pythagorean theorem time again…

00:58

Our “a” and “b” are each 7…

01:01

So when we take a squared plus b squared equals c squared…

01:04

…we get 7 squared plus 7 squared equals c squared…

01:09

49 plus 49 is 98…and the square root of 98 can simplify to 49 times 2…

01:15

…or 7 square root of 2.

01:17

Answer D.

01:18

There’s actually another way we could have gone about things…

01:21

We know that JKL is an isosceles triangle, given that it’s a right triangle and the

01:26

length of both sides is equal.

01:28

So we could have just used what we know about the ratio of sides in an isosceles triangle

01:33

to tell us that the hypotenuse must be x square root of 2…

01:37

…or, in this case, 7 square root of 2. Either way. It’s answer D.

Related Videos

SAT Math 2.1 Geometry and Measurement
2779 Views

SAT Math 2.1 Geometry and Measurement. What is the measure of angle z in terms of x and y?

SAT Math 9.4 Algebra and Functions
1300 Views

SAT Math 9.4 Algebra and Functions

SAT Math 9.2 Algebra and Functions
377 Views

SAT Math 9.2 Algebra and Functions

SAT Math: Identifying an Equation for the Average of Two Percentages
23 Views

In 2014, the unemployment rate of one county in California was 7%. In another county, the unemployment rate was 11%. Which of the following express...

SAT Math: Which Equation Represents Profit?
13 Views

Angela is making cookies for a bake sale. She expects each batch of her cookies to sell for $40. It costs her $10 to make one batch of cookies, and...