no
You can always slide and flip any figure that you want to. But that will not make them the same.
Both. Perpendicular is an 90* angle, usually intersecting. Congruent is two same exact shapes, no matter if you slide, flip, or turn. By: SupeRMAn
Well, basically you are moving a figure over keeping the figure the sameExample: F -> FI just used a slide to move the F over a space, keeping everything else the same.
A transformation that slides a figure horizontally is called a translation. A transformation that slides a figure vertically is also called a translation.
The transformation where a figure is slid from one position to another without being turned is called a translation. In a translation, every point of the figure moves the same distance and in the same direction. This type of transformation preserves the shape and size of the figure, maintaining its orientation throughout the movement.
Congruent in all three cases.
You can always slide and flip any figure that you want to. But that will not make them the same.
no, the image will move in the opposite direction.
There are no images to go off of. This makes it difficult to choose one but you can do an image search to find the answer.
A slide projector forms an enlarged image of a transparent slide on a screen or surface by directing light through the slide onto the surface. The image will appear in color and detail, depending on the quality of the slide and projector.
When you move the slide to the left, the image shifts to the right. This happens because the slide movement is in the opposite direction of the image movement, creating an apparent motion in the opposite direction.
slide
The slide shifted to the right.
When you move a slide up on a microscope stage, the image moves down in the field of view. This is because the light travels through the slide from bottom to top, so as you move the slide up, the image appears to move down.
When you move the slide up, the image on the microscope appears to move down. This is because microscope slides have an inverted image orientation, meaning that moving the slide in one direction causes the image to move in the opposite direction.
Moving the slide to the right in a microscope stage will cause the image to move to the left in the field of view.
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