Class 9 Maths Chapter 3 โ€“ Coordinate Geometry

CBSE Class 9 Mathematics | Chapter 3 | Notes, Examples & Practice

1. The Cartesian System

Coordinate Geometry helps us locate a point in a plane using two perpendicular reference lines. This system was developed by the French mathematician Renรฉ Descartes.

X X' Y Y' O(0,0) I II III IV
Key Definitions
  • Origin (O): The point where the X-axis and Y-axis intersect. Coordinates: \( (0, 0) \).
  • X-axis: The horizontal number line (\( X'OX \)).
  • Y-axis: The vertical number line (\( Y'OY \)).

2. Quadrants & Sign Convention

The axes divide the plane into four parts called Quadrants. The sign of coordinates depends on the quadrant.

Quadrant X-coordinate Y-coordinate Sign
I (First) Positive (+) Positive (+) \((+, +)\)
II (Second) Negative (-) Positive (+) \((-, +)\)
III (Third) Negative (-) Negative (-) \((-, -)\)
IV (Fourth) Positive (+) Negative (-) \((+, -)\)

2.1 Quadrant Logic (No Memorizing)

Just ask two questions:

  • Is x positive or negative?
  • Is y positive or negative?

(+, +) โ†’ Quadrant I
(โˆ’, +) โ†’ Quadrant II
(โˆ’, โˆ’) โ†’ Quadrant III
(+, โˆ’) โ†’ Quadrant IV

๐Ÿง  Trick

Move anticlockwise starting from (+,+).

Quadrant Hunter

Enter coordinates to find their home!

Waiting for input...

3. Understanding Coordinates

The position of a point is given by an ordered pair \( (x, y) \).

Term Alternative Name Definition
x-coordinate Abscissa Perpendicular distance from the Y-axis.
y-coordinate Ordinate Perpendicular distance from the X-axis.
Watch Out:
The coordinates \( (x, y) \) are NOT the same as \( (y, x) \) unless \( x = y \). That's why they are called "ordered pairs".

3.1 Why Are Coordinates Ordered?

Imagine this: You tell a friend your seat location ๐ŸŽŸ๏ธ

โ€œRow 3, Seat 5โ€ is NOT the same as โ€œRow 5, Seat 3โ€.

Similarly:

โš ๏ธ CBSE Trap: Swapping coordinates gives a different point!
๐Ÿง  Think

Can two different ordered pairs represent the same point?

No. Order matters.

3.2 How to Plot a Point (CBSE Method)

To plot a point \( (x, y) \):

  1. Start from the origin (0,0)
  2. Move x units along X-axis (right if +, left if โˆ’)
  3. From there, move y units parallel to Y-axis
  4. Mark the point and label it
๐Ÿ“˜ Exam Tip

CBSE awards marks for correct steps even if the point is slightly misplaced.

4. Points on the Axes

What if a point lies exactly on a line?

Point on X-axis

If a point is on the X-axis, its distance from the X-axis is zero.

Therefore, its y-coordinate (ordinate) is 0.

Form: \( (x, 0) \)

Point on Y-axis

If a point is on the Y-axis, its distance from the Y-axis is zero.

Therefore, its x-coordinate (abscissa) is 0.

Form: \( (0, y) \)

4.1 Distance from Axes โ€“ Think Visually

Key Idea:

Example: Point \( P(-4, 3) \)

โš ๏ธ Sign does NOT affect distance, only magnitude matters.

๐ŸŒ Coordinates in Real Life

Coordinate geometry helps computers, GPS, and games understand where things are.

Concept Mastery Quiz

1. The point \( (-3, 5) \) lies in which quadrant?

A) I Quadrant
B) II Quadrant
C) III Quadrant

2. The abscissa of the point \( (4, -7) \) is:

A) 4
B) -7
C) -3

3. A point on the Y-axis has the form:

A) \( (x, 0) \)
B) \( (0, y) \)
C) \( (y, y) \)

4. The perpendicular distance of point \( P(3, 4) \) from the Y-axis is:

A) 3 units
B) 4 units
C) 5 units

5. In which quadrant do both coordinates have a negative sign?

A) II Quadrant
B) III Quadrant
C) IV Quadrant

๐Ÿšจ Common CBSE Mistakes

Avoid these โ†’ Easy marks saved ๐ŸŽฏ