I agree with Zebu. As to how, draw a couple of right-angled triangles (diagram to be prepared later possibly, but to construct this yourself, draw a straight line from x to g, and a second one from g to a), and use these to generate the equations (capital letters = property of larger circle, small letters similarly):
(1) d = R + (R - 16)
(2) d^2 = 2(R - 9)^2 + R^2 + (R - 16)^2
With a bit of algebra, this reduces to R(R-16) = (R-9)^2, or 2R = 81, from which d = 65 follows.
It may or may not be interesting to have the general results
d = (2a^2 - 2ab + b^2) /(2a - b) = 2r
R = a^2/(2a - b)
where a is the shorter of the two given measurements in the diagram (ie, a is the length of the line EF and b the length of the line AB).
It may also be useful to know that if the outer circle has equation x^2 + y^2 = R^2, then the inner circle has equation
(x + (R - r))^2 + y^2 = r^2
for the definitions of R and r above.
https://www.desmos.com/calculator/farp3mu2ht