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Two Dimensional Analytical Geometry-II — Book-Back Answer Key (Exercise 5.6)

Two Dimensional Analytical Geometry-II — Book-Back Answer Key (Exercise 5.6)

Verified answers to all 25 multiple-choice questions of Exercise 5.6, each with a one-line justification. Options are numbered as printed: (1)–(4).

Correction to the draft key: Question 13 (the inscribed–circumscribed ellipse problem) works out to eccentricity \(e=\tfrac{1}{2}\), which is option (3). The supplied draft key listed option 4 (\(\tfrac{3}{4}\)); that is a slip and the value \(\tfrac{1}{2}\) is used here.

QCorrect optionReason
1(1) \(0,\ -\dfrac{40}{9}\)Both the base circle and the chord vanish at the two given points; tangency to the \(y\)-axis (\(f^{2}=c\)) forces \(\lambda=0\) or \(-\tfrac{40}{9}\).
2(3) \(\dfrac{2}{\sqrt{3}}\)From \(\tfrac{2b^{2}}{a}=8\) and \(2b=c\) with \(c^{2}=a^{2}+b^{2}\), the eccentricity is \(e=\tfrac{c}{a}=\tfrac{2}{\sqrt{3}}\).
3(4) \(-35Centre \((2,4)\), radius \(5\); two intersections need the centre-to-line distance below \(5\), i.e. \(-35
4(3) \(\dfrac{10}{3}\)Centre \((1,k)\) with radius \(|k|\); passing through \((2,3)\) gives \(k=\tfrac{5}{3}\), so the diameter is \(\tfrac{10}{3}\).
5(3) \(\sqrt{10}\)Equal \(x^{2}\) and \(y^{2}\) coefficients force \(b=3\); the reduced circle has radius \(\sqrt{10}\).
6(1) \((4,7)\)The sides are \(x=2,6\) and \(y=5,9\), a square whose inscribed circle is centred at \((4,7)\).
7(1) \(x+2y=3\)A normal passes through the centre \((1,1)\); with slope \(-\tfrac{1}{2}\) it is \(x+2y=3\).
8(3) \(8\)The sum of focal distances equals the major axis \(2a=8\) since \(a=4\).
9(2) \(2\sqrt{5}\)The centre is the intersection \((8,-2)\) of the two diameters; its distance to \((6,2)\) is \(2\sqrt{5}\).
10(2) \(2(a^{2}+b^{2})\)The four foci form a rhombus with equal diagonals \(2\sqrt{a^{2}+b^{2}}\), so the area is \(2(a^{2}+b^{2})\).
11(1) \(\sqrt{2}\)The latus-rectum normals \(x\pm y=3\) are tangent to the circle at \((3,-2)\); the distance is \(\sqrt{2}\).
12(4) \(9\)With \(a=3\) and slope \(-1\), the normal is \(x+y=9\), so \(k=9\).
13(3) \(\dfrac{1}{2}\)\(E_{2}:\,\tfrac{x^{2}}{12}+\tfrac{y^{2}}{16}=1\) (vertical major axis) gives \(e=\tfrac{1}{2}\) — this corrects the draft key, which listed option 4 (\(\tfrac{3}{4}\)).
14(3) \(\left(\dfrac{9}{2\sqrt{2}},\,\dfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\right)\)Slope-\(2\) tangency gives \(y_{1}^{2}=\tfrac{1}{2}\); one contact point is \(\left(\tfrac{9}{2\sqrt{2}},\tfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\right)\).
15(1) \(x^{2}+y^{2}-6y-7=0\)Foci \((\pm\sqrt{7},0)\); a circle centred \((0,3)\) with \(r^{2}=16\) is \(x^{2}+y^{2}-6y-7=0\).
16(4) \(\dfrac{1}{4}\)\(T=(0,r)\) through the origin; external tangency to \(C\) gives \(r=\tfrac{1}{4}\).
17(4) \(40\)Here \(a=5,\ b=4\); the rhombus area is \(\tfrac{1}{2}(10)(8)=40\).
18(1) \(2ab\)The largest inscribed rectangle has area \(2ab\), reached at \(\theta=\tfrac{\pi}{4}\).
19(1) \(\dfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\)A right angle at \(B\) gives \(c^{2}=b^{2}\), hence \(e=\tfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\).
20(2) \(\dfrac{1}{3}\)The relation is \(PF^{2}=\tfrac{1}{9}PM^{2}\), so \(e=\tfrac{1}{3}\).
21(2) \(x=-1\)The locus of vertices of perpendicular tangents is the directrix \(x=-1\).
22(3) \((5,-2)\)Centre \((3,-2)\), radius \(2\); the circle also passes through \((5,-2)\).
23(3) \(\dfrac{x^{2}}{9}+\dfrac{y^{2}}{5}=1\)The focus–directrix law with \(e=\tfrac{2}{3}\) yields the ellipse \(\tfrac{x^{2}}{9}+\tfrac{y^{2}}{5}=1\).
24(3) \(0\)Tangency gives \(m=\pm2\); the roots of the quadratic sum to \(a+b=0\).
25(2) \((-3,2)\)The centre \((4,2)\) is the midpoint of the diameter, so the other end is \((-3,2)\).
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