Here we are.
Let
, axis
be bisector of the
,
,
. For a point
we will designate its coordinates as
. Then
,
,
,
. We will make an exception for
, having its coordinates to be
for brevity.
For line with equation
the square of the distance from
to it is
. For
to be bisector of the
we need distances from
to
and to
to be equal and to have
and
to be on different sides of
. The last condition boils down to
belongs to arcs
and
.
Having coordinates of points
,
, and
, the calculation of distance is easy. The condition of equedistance becomes
. The first factor is equation of line
and is of no interest for us. The second factor is more interesting. Using polar form of coordinates for
and
we get much more manageable expression:
. Now we note that
belongs to unit circle and therefore
. So finally
. Or,
— an equation of a hyperbola.
Of course we need to consider case
when the hyperbola reduces to pair of lines
and
. The horizontal line intersects arcs in points
, the vertical does not intersect arcs. So in this case we have exactly two points in the locus.
In following we will assume
— all inequalities are strict.
Some properties of this hyperbola:
1) Its axises are parallel to the coordinate axises.
2) The intersection (point
) of axises is always inside rectangle
. As we assumed
, both
and
.
3) Point
always belongs to the hyperbola.
4) Immediate consequence is that the hyperbola intersects the arc
in exactly one point.
5) Each intersection of the hyperbola and circle has unique
coordinates (the function is monotonic in each segment
and
).
Therefore, to find number of points in the locus we need to find how many intersections we have with the arc
, id est how many solutions of the system:
First, we will solve second equation for
:
. Next, we will substitute
in the first equation with this expression and simplify result:
. Thirdly, we will replace
with
, thus making the last inequality equivalent to
:
.
We are ready to apply the Descartes' rule of signs to this equation. The number of positive roots is equal to number of sign changes in the list of coefficients, or less than that by even number. Marking positive coefficients with + and negative with -, we have ++??-. The only way we can have more than 1 root is if ?? = -+, that is
and
. Because coefficients for
are positive, we have that
and
simultaneously. Therefore
which is never true for
.
All together now! We have exactly one intersection on the arc
and exactly one intersection on the arc
.