The Problem with General Form
In Lesson 1, we had nice standard form equations:
In real problems, you might see:
Where's the center? Where's the radius?
Goal: Convert general form → standard form using completing the square
General Form vs. Standard Form
General form:
- Compact, but center and radius are hidden
Standard form:
- Center
and radius are visible
Strategy: Complete the square to reconstruct the squared binomials
Completing the Square: The Rule
Starting with
The rule: Add
Example:
Half the coefficient of
Quick Check: What Do You Add?
To complete the square for
Half the coefficient of
Quick Check — Answer
The same rule applies to
Complete the square separately for
Full Example: Step 1
Given:
Step 1: Move the constant to the right. Group
Full Example: Steps 2 and 3
Step 2: Complete the square for
Step 3: Complete the square for
Full Example: Step 4 — The Result
Step 4: Factor and read
Center:
Note:
Radius:
Check:
Your Turn: Try the Process
Equation:
Step 1: Group and move constant:
$(x^2 + 6x \phantom{{}+ 9}) + (y^2 - 10y \phantom{{}+ 25}) = $ ___
Step 2: Complete for
Step 3: Complete for
Step 4: Factor and identify center and radius
Your Turn — Answer
Add
Center:
Radius:
Edge Cases: Always Check!
After completing the square, always check the right side:
: real circle ✓ : single point — only the center satisfies the equation : no real solution — no circle exists in the real plane
From Equations to Applications
The full toolkit:
- Standard form → read center and radius immediately
- General form → complete the square → standard form → read
Now let's apply this toolkit to real problems
Problem 1: Find the Equation
A circle passes through
Step 1: Find the radius using the distance formula
Step 2: Write the equation
Problem 2: General Form to Center and Radius
Find the center and radius of
(We solved this in the guided practice!)
Center:
Strategy: complete the square first, then read
Problem 3: Verify a Point
Is
Substitute
Yes —
The legs are 4 and 3, hypotenuse is 5 — a 3-4-5 right triangle!
Problem 4: Circle at the Origin
A circle is centered at the origin and passes through
Radius: Distance from origin to
Equation:
(Another Pythagorean triple: 6-8-10)
Real-World Application
Scenario: A cell tower is at coordinates
Coverage boundary equation:
Is a house at
No — the house is outside the coverage area.
Practice: Mixed Problems
Solve each problem:
-
Complete the square:
. Find center and radius. -
Write the equation of a circle with center
passing through . -
A radar system covers a circle centered at
with radius . Is within range?
Work through all three before advancing
Practice — Answers
-
→ Center , radius -
= distance from to =
-
Radius squared: . Since ✓ Within range.
Key Takeaways
✓ General form
✓ Complete the square to convert to standard form — 4 steps
✓ Completing the square rule: half the coefficient, then square it
✓ Add to both sides when completing the square — balance the equation
✓ Always check that
Watch out: Add
Watch out: Add to both sides — one-sided additions break the equation
Watch out: Check
Next: Equations of Parabolas
You've mastered circle equations — standard form, general form, and applications
Coming up: HSG.GPE.A.2
- Derive the equation of a parabola using the same geometric approach
- A parabola is defined by points equidistant from a focus and a directrix
- The derivation strategy you learned for circles carries directly over