rotate 306 over the origin
Rotate 360 degrees
The identity transformation.
They are translation, reflection and rotation. An enlargement changes the size of the image.
It is an enlargement
The transformation process is an 'enlargement'
Rotate 360 degrees
56
The identity transformation.
The result of any of the following transformations, or their combinations, is similar to the original image:translation,rotation,enlargement,reflection.
They are translation, reflection and rotation. An enlargement changes the size of the image.
It is an enlargement
The transformation process is an 'enlargement'
It is the output of a function.A function is a mapping that associates an image to each pre-image. The term is often used in the context of transformations but need not be restricted to that use.It is the output of a function.A function is a mapping that associates an image to each pre-image. The term is often used in the context of transformations but need not be restricted to that use.It is the output of a function.A function is a mapping that associates an image to each pre-image. The term is often used in the context of transformations but need not be restricted to that use.It is the output of a function.A function is a mapping that associates an image to each pre-image. The term is often used in the context of transformations but need not be restricted to that use.
The 3 transformations of math are: translation, reflection and rotation. These are the well known ones. There is a fourth, dilation, in which the pre image is the same shape as the image, but the same size in the world
A rigid transformation that does not result in a reversed orientation of the original image is a translation or a rotation. Both transformations preserve the orientation of the figure, meaning that the shape and arrangement of points remain unchanged. In contrast, a reflection is the rigid transformation that reverses the orientation.
None of these transformations affect the size nor shape of the image.
To determine the coordinates of the image produced by a composition of transformations, you'll need to apply each transformation step-by-step to the original coordinates. Start with the first transformation, apply it to the coordinates, and then take the resulting coordinates and apply the next transformation. The final coordinates after all transformations will give you the image's location. If specific transformations and original coordinates are provided, I can give a more precise answer.