Surveying Problem Relating To Circles & Lines

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The discussion revolves around a surveying problem involving a circle and points in a Cartesian coordinate system. A circle centered at point B with known coordinates and radius intersects a line connecting point A, which lies outside the circle, to point B. The goal is to determine the coordinates of point C, where the line intersects the circle, given the distance from point A to point C. The solution involves using trigonometry to calculate the angles and applying the cosine and sine functions to find the coordinates of point C. The discussion emphasizes the use of triangles and similar triangles to solve the problem effectively.
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Hello all

I am hoping someone could help shed some light on a surveying problem I am having.

The problem is this:-

• A circle is centered at point B with Known co-ordinates (X2,Y2)
• The circle has a radius which is known (R).
• Point A lays outside of the circle with known co-ordinates (X1,Y1)
• A line is connected between Point A and Point B.
• Point C lays on the line between Point A & B.
• Point C also lays at the exact intersection of where the line and the circle meet.
• The distance between Point A and Point C is known (S).
• All points are in a Cartesian co-ordinate system

Work out what are the co-ordinates of Point C.

I have attached a diagram of the problem.

Can anyone help?
 

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You should be able to solve this using TRIG
Look at the triangle X2,Y2 X1,Y1, X1,Y2
You can then figure out the angles involved.
Then using similar triangles figure out where point C is :)
 
Specifically
θ = tan^{-1}((Y1-Y2)/(X1-X2))

then
C_x = cos(θ)*R
C_y = sin(θ)*R
 
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