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In this unit, your student will make connections between geometry and algebra by working in the coordinate plane with geometric concepts from prior units. The coordinate grid imposes a structure that can provide new insights into ideas students have previously explored.
Your student has already worked with transformations. Here, they’ll think about transformations as functions that take points in the plane as inputs and give other points as outputs. For example, the notation \((x,y) \rightarrow (x+4,y-2)\) means that to find the image for each point in a figure, we add 4 units to the \(x\)-coordinate and subtract 2 units from the \(y\)-coordinate. Let’s apply this transformation to triangle \(ABC\).
| \((x,y)\) | \((x+4,y-2)\) |
|---|---|
| \(A:(\text-4,1)\) | \(A’:(0,\text-1)\) |
| \(B:(0,2)\) | \(B’:(4,0)\) |
| \(C:(\text-3,3)\) | \(C’:(1,1)\) |
This transformation was a translation by the directed line segment from \((\text-4,1)\) to \((0,\text-1)\), or informally, a translation 4 units right and 2 units down.
Transformations can also be used to analyze slopes of parallel and perpendicular lines. Suppose we draw a line passing through the point \(P=(\text-3,2)\) and the point \((0,0)\), then apply the transformation \((x,y)\rightarrow (y,\text-x)\) to the line.
This rule rotates the line 90 degrees clockwise using the point \((0,0)\) as a center. The center of rotation doesn’t move, so \((0,0)\) maps to itself. The image of point \(P\) is \(P’=(2,3)\). The slope of the original line is \(\text-\frac23\), and the slope of the image is \(\frac32\). The slopes are opposite reciprocals of one another. Your student will use this to prove that any two perpendicular lines that aren’t horizontal and vertical have slopes that are opposite reciprocals.
The Pythagorean Theorem proves useful in the coordinate plane as well. We can find the distance between any two points in the plane. Let's find the distance between \((2,5)\) and an unknown point \((x,y)\). We can calculate the distance between these points by drawing a right triangle whose hypotenuse is the distance between the 2 points.
The lengths of the triangle’s legs can be calculated by subtracting the coordinates of the points: The vertical leg is \(y-5\) units long, and the horizontal leg is \(x-2\) units long. Substitute these into the Pythagorean Theorem.
\((x-2)^2+(y-5)^2=d^2\)
We can check if any point is a given distance away from the point \((2,5)\) by using this equation. Let's see if the point \((6,12)\) is 8 units away from \((2,5)\) by substituting \((6,12)\) into our equation.
\((6-2)^2+(12-5)^2=d^2\)
\((4)^2+(7)^2=d^2\)
\(65=d^2\)
The distance between the points is the positive number that squares to make 65, or about 8.1 units, so it’s not exactly 8 units away from \((2,5)\).
Here is a task to try with your student:
The image shows triangle \(J\).
Apply each transformation rule to triangle \(J\). Then, describe the transformation, and decide whether it produced a congruent image, a similar image, or neither.
Solution: