Respuesta :
The center of a circle with the equation given is (2,-1).
The standard form for the equation of a circle is
[tex](x-h)^2+(y-k)^2=r^2[/tex]
The center of such a circle is the point with coordinates (h, k).
To get your equation into that form, you have to complete the square (twice; once for x and once for y).
Add 11 to both sides so the constant appears on the right. Build in some space to add a couple of numbers, like this:
[tex]x^2-4x+()+y^2+2y+()=11[/tex]
To complete the square on x, look at the coefficient of x (that's -4), take half of it (that's -2), then square it (that's 4). Add 4 inside the first pair of (). Do the same kind of thing for y -- half of 2 is 1 and 1 squared is 1; add 1 inside the second pair of (). Be sure to add 4 and 1 to the right side, too.
[tex]x^2-4x+4+y^2+2y+1=16[/tex]
The first three terms factor and the next 3 terms factor.
[tex](x-2)^2+(y+1)^2=16[/tex]
Match this up with the standard form
[tex](x-h)^2+(y-k)^2=r^2[/tex]
The center of the circle is (2, -1).
[tex](x-h)^2+(y-k)^2=r^2[/tex]
The center of such a circle is the point with coordinates (h, k).
To get your equation into that form, you have to complete the square (twice; once for x and once for y).
Add 11 to both sides so the constant appears on the right. Build in some space to add a couple of numbers, like this:
[tex]x^2-4x+()+y^2+2y+()=11[/tex]
To complete the square on x, look at the coefficient of x (that's -4), take half of it (that's -2), then square it (that's 4). Add 4 inside the first pair of (). Do the same kind of thing for y -- half of 2 is 1 and 1 squared is 1; add 1 inside the second pair of (). Be sure to add 4 and 1 to the right side, too.
[tex]x^2-4x+4+y^2+2y+1=16[/tex]
The first three terms factor and the next 3 terms factor.
[tex](x-2)^2+(y+1)^2=16[/tex]
Match this up with the standard form
[tex](x-h)^2+(y-k)^2=r^2[/tex]
The center of the circle is (2, -1).