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infiniti007
- Senior | Next Rank: 100 Posts
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- Joined: Wed Feb 25, 2015 6:00 pm
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From Statement 1 you can obviously deduce that triangle ABC is isosceles, but although segment BC seems to be the diameter of the circle, you can't assume that and so you can't determine the area of the triangle from Statement 1.
From Statement 2 you can determine that BC is a diameter of the circle because the length of BC is twice the radius of the circle.
Regarding your question, you can draw a line segment that goes from A to BC and is perpendicular to BC and thus create two similar right triangles, but the segment will not necessarily intersect BC at the center of the circle, and the two triangles created will not necessarily be isosceles right triangles. The only way that the segment will intersect BC at the center of the circle and they will be isosceles is if A is at the midpoint of arc BC, which case would be the case if AB were equal to BC.














