If the equation a|z|² + α'z + αz' + d = 0 represents a circle where a, d are real constants, then which of the following condition is correct?
If the equation a|z|² + α'z + αz' + d = 0 represents a circle where a, d are real constants, then which of the following condition is correct?
The general equation of a circle is given by:
az z? + α? z + αz? + d = 0
This can be rewritten as:
z? + (α? /a)z + (α/a)z? + d/a = 0
From this, we can identify the centre and radius:
Centre = -α/a
Radius = √ (|-α/a|² - d/a)
For a real circle to exist, the term under the square root must be non-negative:
|-α
Similar Questions for you
...(1)
–2α + β = 0 …(2)
Solving (1) and (2)
a =
|z| = 0 (not acceptable)
|z| = 1
|z|2 = 1
Given : x2 – 70x + l = 0
->Let roots be a and b
->b = 70 – a
->= a (70 – a)
l is not divisible by 2 and 3
->a = 5, b = 65
->
z1 + z2 = 5
⇒ 20 + 15i = 125 – 15z1z2
⇒ 3z1z2 = 25 – 4 – 3i
3z1z2 = 21– 3i
z1⋅z2 = 7 – i
(z1 + z2)2 = 25
= 11 + 2i
&nb
a = 1 > 0 and D < 0
4 (3k – 1)2 – 4 (8k2 – 7) < 0
K = 3
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Maths Ncert Solutions class 11th 2026
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