Which point is not located on the xaxis or the yaxis of a coordinate grid?Read more:Which_point_is_not_located_on_the_xaxis_or_the_yaxis_of_a_coordinate_grid
It is called the ordinate.
In transformations a reflection across the x axis produces a mirror image
Glide Reflection
.... then your graph is inverted.
Which point is not located on the xaxis or the yaxis of a coordinate grid?Read more:Which_point_is_not_located_on_the_xaxis_or_the_yaxis_of_a_coordinate_grid
It is called the ordinate.
In transformations a reflection across the x axis produces a mirror image
No. Glide reflection is a combination of an ordinary reflection and a slide along the line of reflection. A two reflections across two vertical lines is a translation without any reflection or rotation.
Glide Reflection
.... then your graph is inverted.
For a reflection across the x axis, both the slope and the y intercept would have the same magnitude but the opposite sign.
When a point is reflected across the x-axis, the y-coordinate changes sign while the x-coordinate remains the same. If the new point after reflection is -7.56, the original point must be 7.56. The distance between the two points, which are (x, 7.56) and (x, -7.56), is the absolute difference of their y-coordinates: |7.56 - (-7.56)| = |7.56 + 7.56| = 15.12. Thus, the distance between the two points is 15.12 units.
the difference is that in translation you slide the figure and in reflection you reflect the figure across the reflection line :)
When a translation is followed by a reflection across a line parallel to the direction of translation, the resulting transformation is a glide reflection. This transformation involves moving the shape in a specified direction (translation) and then flipping it over (reflection) across a parallel line. The combination results in the shape being both translated and reflected.
Each reflection produces a mirror image.=================================Answer #2:With the initial point at (0, 0) ... the origin of coordinates ...-- the first reflection, across x = -3, moves the point to (-6, 0), and-- the second reflection, around y = -3, moves it to (-6, -6) .
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