The y-coordinates.
The y-coordinates.
The y-coordinates.
The y-coordinates.
1 significant figure.
6,256 rounded to 1 significant figure is 6,000
No, to three sf.
To convert the number 0.004758 to three significant figures, we need to round it off appropriately. Identify the significant figures: The given number, 0.004758, has 5 significant figures. Determine the significant figures based on the three most significant digits: The three most significant digits in 0.004758 are 4, 7, and 5. Round the number: Look at the digit immediately after the third significant figure, which is 7. Since 7 is 5 or greater, we round up the third significant figure (5). Apply rounding: The number rounded to three significant figures is 0.00476. Therefore, 0.004758 rounded to three significant figures is **0.00476**.
It is then 0.067 when rounded to 2 significant figures
To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise, you can achieve this by first reflecting the figure over the y-axis and then reflecting it over the x-axis. This double reflection effectively rotates the figure 180 degrees clockwise around the origin.
To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise about the origin you need to take all of the coordinates of the figure and change the sign of the x-coordinates to the opposite sign(positive to negative or negative to positive). You then do the same with the y-coordinates and plot the resulting coordinates to get your rotated figure.
The original figure is called the pre-image. After the transformation it becomes the image.
The angles have the same measure. In the reflection the order of the angles are changed from clockwise to counterclockwise.
how does translation a figure vertically affect the coordinates of its vertices
No. However, the way in which it is described - in particular, what constitutes its base - may change.
Figures that can be subdivided into simple figures.
The plural of the noun figure is figures.
It is a plane figure.
Depends on what figures are "from brackets".
what is this figures connection with browns family, if we can believe the figures claims
Short answer is: they're not. In 'figure skating' competition, skaters were required to trace certain 'figures,' for example the figure 8, on the ice. The compulsory figures in international competition were dropped completely after 1990.