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Which three go together? Why do they go together?
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Diego, Jada, and Noah were given the following task: Prove that if a point is the same distance from as it is from , then must be on the perpendicular bisector of .
Read the script your teacher will give you. After each sentence you read, decide if there is anything to add to each diagram (and if so, add it).
Diego’s image:
Jada’s image:
Noah’s image:
With your group, choose one student’s approach to discuss.
Prove that if a point is the same distance from as it is from , then must be on the perpendicular bisector of .
If is a point on the perpendicular bisector of , prove that the distance from to is the same as the distance from to .
The perpendicular bisector of a line segment is exactly those points that are the same distance from both endpoints of the line segment. This idea can be broken down into two statements:
These statements are converses of each other. Two statements are converses if the “if” parts and the “then” parts are swapped. The converse of a true statement isn’t always true, but in this case, both statements of the Perpendicular Bisector Theorem are true.
A line of reflection is the perpendicular bisector of segments connecting points in the original figure with corresponding points in the image. Therefore, the following three lines are all the same:
It is useful to know that the perpendicular bisector of a line segment is also all the points which are the same distance from both endpoints of the line segment, because then:
The converse of an if-then statement is the statement that switches the hypothesis and the conclusion.
Example: