Only one which is a tangent to that circle.
When a line touches a point on the circumference of a circle, it is referred to as a tangent. A tangent to a circle is a straight line that intersects the circle at exactly one point, known as the point of tangency. At this point, the tangent is perpendicular to the radius drawn to the point of tangency. This unique relationship defines the geometric properties of tangents in relation to circles.
Always one for sure, and never more than one.
The angle between the two tangents is 20 degrees.
100 degrees
All points on the circumference of a circle drawn on a plane are equidistant from the single point on the plane which is the center of the circle.
Two tangents can be drawn from a point outside a circle to the circle. The answer for other curves depends on the curve.
2
Any tangent must contain a point outside the circle. So the answer to the question, as stated, is infinitely many. However, if the question was how many tangents to a circle can be drawn from a point outside the circle, the answer is two.
No tangent No tangent
When a line touches a point on the circumference of a circle, it is referred to as a tangent. A tangent to a circle is a straight line that intersects the circle at exactly one point, known as the point of tangency. At this point, the tangent is perpendicular to the radius drawn to the point of tangency. This unique relationship defines the geometric properties of tangents in relation to circles.
Always one for sure, and never more than one.
None can. A tangent is a line that touches a circle at only one point. If it wentthrough a point inside the circle, then it would have to touch the circle at twopoints ... one on the way in and another one on the way out.
The angle between the two tangents is 20 degrees.
It depends on what information you have: radius, diameter, lengths of tangents from a point outside the circle, length of chord and its distance from the centre, etc. Also, the term is circumference, not circumfrence.
100 degrees
All points on the circumference of a circle drawn on a plane are equidistant from the single point on the plane which is the center of the circle.
Yes, the point at which a tangent line intersects a circle is indeed called the point of tangency. At this point, the tangent line touches the circle at exactly one location, and it is perpendicular to the radius drawn to that point. This relationship is fundamental in geometry, particularly in the study of circles and tangents.