Intermediate

Circles, Sectors and Circle Theorems

AicademyAicademy
·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
G9·G18·G10

Circle Terminology (G9)

Every circle has these key parts:

TermDefinition
CentreThe fixed point equidistant from all points on the circle
RadiusA line from the centre to the circumference ()
DiameterA chord through the centre;
ChordA straight line joining two points on the circumference
ArcA portion of the circumference
SectorA "pie slice" — region bounded by two radii and an arc
SegmentRegion between a chord and the arc it cuts off
TangentA straight line that touches the circle at exactly one point
CircumferenceThe complete perimeter of the circle

Key property: a tangent at a point is perpendicular to the radius drawn to that point.

Arc Length and Sector Area (G18)

A sector with angle (out of ) takes a fraction of the full circle.

Worked example — sector with radius 8 cm and angle :

Arc length cm

Sector area cm² ✓

Perimeter of a sector = arc length + 2 radii cm ✓

Working backwards — find the angle given arc length cm and cm:

Circle Theorems — Angles (G10 Higher)

Theorem 1 — Angle at the centre:

The angle at the centre of a circle is twice the angle at the circumference subtended by the same arc.

(where is the centre, , , on the circle)

Theorem 2 — Angle in a semicircle:

An angle in a semicircle (inscribed in a diameter) is a right angle. when is a diameter.

Theorem 3 — Angles in the same segment:

Angles subtended by the same chord on the same side of the chord are equal.

(both in the same segment)

Theorem 4 — Opposite angles in a cyclic quadrilateral:

Opposite angles of a cyclic quadrilateral (all four vertices on the circle) sum to .

;

Circle Theorems — Radii, Tangents and Chords (G10 Higher)

Theorem 5 — Tangent-radius perpendicularity:

A radius to the point of tangency is perpendicular to the tangent. If is the radius drawn to the tangent point , then tangent.

Theorem 6 — Two tangents from an external point:

The two tangents drawn from an external point to a circle are equal in length.

where is external, and are the tangent points.

Theorem 7 — Perpendicular from centre to chord:

The perpendicular from the centre of a circle to a chord bisects the chord.

Theorem 8 — Alternate segment theorem:

The angle between a tangent and a chord at the point of tangency equals the inscribed angle subtending the same chord on the opposite side.

(tangent-chord) (inscribed angle in alternate segment)

Worked example is the centre of a circle. Chord makes an angle of with the tangent at . Find the angle in the alternate segment.

By the alternate segment theorem:

How much of this have you taken in?

Quiz yourself on this section — free, no card needed.

Test myself

Using Circle Theorems to Prove Results

For proof questions (Higher), the method is:

  1. Mark relevant angles using a letter.
  2. Apply named theorems step by step.
  3. State the conclusion and the theorem used at each step.

Worked example — prove that the angle subtended by a diameter at the circumference is .

Let be a diameter, the centre, a point on the circle. Let .

By the angle at the centre theorem: . But (straight line, since is a diameter).

Therefore

Worked example — in a cyclic quadrilateral , . Find .

Opposite angles sum to :

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Sector perimeter — omitting the two radii

Sector perimeter arc length . Many students calculate only the arc length, forgetting the two straight sides (the radii).

2. Circle theorem — applying the angle at the centre rule incorrectly

The central angle is double the inscribed angle only when both are subtended by the same arc. Confusing which arc each angle is subtended by leads to errors.

3. Alternate segment theorem — picking the wrong angle

The alternate segment theorem connects a tangent-chord angle with the inscribed angle in the segment on the opposite side of the chord. Take care to identify which segment is the "alternate" one.

4. Cyclic quadrilateral — assuming all adjacent angles sum to 180°

It is the opposite angles (not adjacent) that are supplementary in a cyclic quadrilateral.

MistakeCorrection
"Sector perimeter with , : "Add the two radii: perimeter cm
"Angle at circumference , so angle at centre "Angle at centre is twice the circumference angle:
"In cyclic quad, adjacent angles sum to "Opposite angles sum to

Generate revision on any topic you study

Type any topic you're studying and Aicademy generates a complete lesson, quiz, and flashcard set — personalised to your level.

Lessons on anything

Structured, level-matched lessons on any topic you study

Practice quizzes

Find out what you actually know before the exam does

Flashcard sets

Lock in key concepts with instant revision cards

Ask Aica

Stuck on something? Get a clear explanation, any time

Prev

Area, Perimeter and Volume

Next

Similarity, 3D Shapes and Coordinate Geometry

Related lessons

6 Slides

Lesson

Area, Perimeter and Volume

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Graph Transformations, Rates of Change, and Circles (Higher)

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Circle Theorems

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Angles and Polygons

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago