An inscribed angle has its vertex on the circle and its sides are chords.
Theorem: Inscribed angle = ½ × intercepted arc
Vertex location rule:
Vertex at center → angle equals arc
Vertex on circle → angle = half the arc
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Example 1: Using the Inscribed Angle Theorem
Given: Arc . Find inscribed angle .
Given: Inscribed angle . Find arc .
The formula works in both directions.
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Connecting Central and Inscribed Angles
Central angle . Point on the major arc. Find .
Step 1: Arc = (equals the central angle)
Step 2:
Same arc → inscribed angle = ½ × central angle
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Quick Check: Central Versus Inscribed Angle
Central angle . Point on the major arc.
What is inscribed angle ?
Identify the intercepted arc, then apply the theorem.
Answer: Arc , so
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Inscribed Angles Sharing the Same Arc
Corollary: Inscribed angles intercepting the same arc are congruent.
Each equals of the same arc, so they must be equal.
If , then — regardless of where and are on the major arc.
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
The Semicircle Theorem: Diameter Makes 90°
An inscribed angle subtending a diameter is always 90°.
Why: Diameter = arc of , so inscribed angle =
Converse: A 90° inscribed angle means the chord is a diameter.
SAT tip: scan every circle diagram for a diameter — mark that angle 90° immediately.
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Right Triangle Inscribed in a Circle
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Example 3: Finding the Diameter
, , . Find the diameter.
Step 1: → is a diameter (semicircle theorem converse)
Step 2:
Diameter = 10, Radius = 5
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Quick Check: What Does 90° Tell You?
In a circle, inscribed angle .
What can you conclude about chord ?
Think before advancing...
Answer: A 90° inscribed angle means the subtended chord is a diameter. Chord is a diameter of the circle.
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
SAT Problem 1: Two-Step Chain
Central angle . Point on the major arc. Find .
Step 1: Arc = (equals central angle)
Step 2:
Chain: central angle → arc → inscribed angle
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
SAT Problem 2: Semicircle and Pythagorean Theorem
Diameter , . Find .
Step 1: on circle + is diameter →
Step 2:
5-12-13 Pythagorean triple
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
SAT Problem 3: Applying the Same-Arc Corollary
. Both and are inscribed angles. Find .
Identify the intercepted arcs before calculating.
Answer: Both angles intercept arc → same-arc corollary →
No calculation — arc recognition only.
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Summary: The Four Key Rules
✓ Central angle = intercepted arc (vertex at center)
✓ Inscribed angle = ½ × intercepted arc (vertex on circle)
✓ Same-arc corollary: inscribed angles on the same arc are congruent
✓ Semicircle theorem: inscribed angle on a diameter = 90°; converse holds
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Watch Out: Four Common Mistakes
Inscribed angle ≠ arc — it equals half the arc Intercepted arc is opposite the vertex — trace both sides to find it Same-arc corollary: only applies when angles intercept the same arc Diameter in a diagram → mark the inscribed angle 90° immediately
Central and Inscribed Angles | Lesson 1 of 1
Coming Up: Tangent Lines and Chord Properties
Next lesson covers:
Tangent-radius perpendicularity
Tangent segments from an external point
Chord intersection and segment relationships
These properties combine with today's inscribed angle rules in multi-step SAT problems.