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Here is the problem:

A chord $AB$ is drawn in a circle. Another circle is tangent to this chord at the point $M$ and to the given circle at the point $K$. Prove that $KM$ is the bisector of the angle $AKB$

A figure to the problem:

*All the data that is not given in the problem's description is marked with blue or red.

enter image description here

On my own I couldn't solve it, neither could I with a hint from the textbook, which is:

Let the segments $AK$ and $BK$ intersect the circle of smaller radius at points $E$ and $F$, respectively. Prove that $EF \parallel AB$. To do this, draw a tangent to the two given circles, that they both will share, through the point K.

I have indeed proved that they are parallel, but don't see where to move next:

  1. After making all the additional drawings suggested by the hint, I've also put two points $L$ and $J$ on the tangent line that passes through the point $K$.
  2. By a theorem in my book(which I think is a commonly known fact), since the $LJ$ line is tangent to both circles: $\angle LKA = \frac{1}{2} \cup AK = \frac{1}{2} \cup EK \implies \angle KFE = \angle KBA \implies EF \parallel AB$. The same way it can be proven that $\angle JKB = \angle KEF = \angle KAB$, but it's not necessary, I guess.
  3. From this point on I've tried a variety of different approaches, but none of them brought me even a bit closer to the proof.

What am I missing? How to prove it?

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  • $\begingroup$ @JeanMarie, sure. Edited, thanks! $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 8:21
  • $\begingroup$ see animation here $\endgroup$
    – Jean Marie
    Commented Jun 26, 2023 at 21:58

2 Answers 2

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Let $I$ be the centre of the inner circle. Join $IM$.

Since $AB$ is a tangent of the inner circle, $IM\perp AB$. Since $EF\parallel AB$ from your progress, also $IM\perp EF$.

So $M$ is the midpoint of arc $\overset{\Large\frown}{EMF}$. At point $K$, the angles that arcs $\overset{\Large\frown}{EM}$ and $\overset{\Large\frown}{MF}$ subtend are equal:

$$\angle EKM = \angle MKF$$

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks! I find very useful your solution, and using your solution I proved a bit longer way that $IM ⊥ EF \implies ∠EKM=∠MKF$. But I don't get it, how did you conclude it: "So $M$ is the midpoint of arc $EMF$"? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 8:32
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    $\begingroup$ For a circular chord, its perpendicular bisector passes through the centre. Similarly, a line through the centre $I$ and perpendicular to the chord would bisect the chord. Or in more detail, by similar triangles, these angles at the centre are equal: $\angle EIM = \angle MIF$. $\endgroup$
    – peterwhy
    Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 14:00
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Here is a proof without angles.

First of all, the large circle is the image of the small one by the homothety (= enlargment) with center $K$ and ratio $r>1$ (equal to the ratio of their radii).

Let us express in two different ways the power of points $A$, resp. $B$, with respect to the small circle :

$$\begin{cases}AE \times AK &=& AM^2\\BF \times BK &=& BM^2\end{cases}\implies \frac{AE \times AK}{BF \times BK}=\frac{AM^2}{BM^2}\tag{1}$$

Besides :

$$AK=r EK = r(AK-AE) \ \iff \ r AE = (r-1) AK \ \iff $$

$$AE=\frac{r-1}{r}AK\tag{2}$$

For the same reason :

$$BF=\frac{r-1}{r}BK\tag{3}$$

Plugging (2) and (3) into (1) gives :

$$\left(\frac{AK}{BK}\right)^2=\left(\frac{AM}{BM}\right)^2 \ \implies \ \frac{AK}{BK}=\frac{AM}{BM}$$

We can conclude using the characteristic property of an angle bissector in a triangle to divide the opposite side in the ratio of the two other sides.

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  • $\begingroup$ It is funny that I have used here the same technique that I used in my yesterday answer (math.stackexchange.com/a/4723187/305862) to a somehow similar question with a figure composed of a circle, a parabola and a chord tangent to the circle (the parabola replaces the large circle in your question). $\endgroup$
    – Jean Marie
    Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 7:24
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    $\begingroup$ The solution is very elegant, the only thing is I needed to solve it using the hint. Anyways, thank you, Jane! $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 8:36
  • $\begingroup$ In fact, the hint (parallelism of $EF$ and $AB$) is a direct consequence of a property of the homothety I have considered which sends $E \to A$ and $F \to B$... $\endgroup$
    – Jean Marie
    Commented Jun 23, 2023 at 13:47

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