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Show that the distance between a point p(x,y) and the origin is √x^2 + y^2

User Nishan B
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

The distance of the point P(X,Y) from the origin O(0,0) is given by ,

OP = under root (X-0)² + (Y-0)².

i.e,

OP = under root X² + Y².

y-x=(x+y)²

x²+y²-x+y=0

Explanation:

User Noah Cristino
by
7.1k points
3 votes

Answer:

See below.

Explanation:

To find the distance between any two points, we can use the distance formula:


d=\sqrt{(x_2-x_1)^2+(y_2-y_1)^2

We want to prove that the distance between a point P(x,y) and the origin is:


d=√(x^2+y^2)

Remember that the origin is at (0,0).

So, let's prove it using the distance formula. Let's let the origin point (0,0) be (x₁, y₁) and let's let P(x, y) be (x₂, y₂). Substitute these values into the distance formula. This yields:


d=\sqrt{(x-0)^2+(y-0)^2

Subtract:


d=\sqrt{(x)^2+(y)^2

Simplify:


d=√(x^2+y^2)

This is the same equation as given.

Q.E.D.

User Menglong Li
by
8.4k points

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