It is a translation on the Cartesian plane
A translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and in the same direction on the Cartesian plane
Scaling will proportionally reduce or enlarge a figure. The amount of scaling is given by the scale factor (greater than zero) If the scale factor is less than 1, the figure is reduced and it is sometimes called a contraction If the scale factor is greater than 1, the figure is enlarged, and it is called a dilation or enlargement. If a centre of enlargement is used, the distance of every point from the centre is multiplied by the scale factor. The scale factor can be negative in which case the distance to the new point is measured on the opposite side of the centre to the original point.
Scaling changes the size of a figure. If the scale factor is greater than 1, the figure is enlarged; if the scale factor is less than 1, the figure is reduced. I the scale factor is equal to 1, the figure's size is unchanged. If there is a centre of enlargement, the new figure can be drawn exactly by multiplying the distance of every point from the centre of enlargement, multiplying this by the scale factor and drawing the new point at this distance from the centre of enlargement. (For a polygonal figure, only the vertices need be measured and the lines between the vertices of the original figure drawn in). With a centre of enlargement, the scale factor can be negative. In this case, the distance to the new points is measured on the opposite side of the centre to the original points, so that it is a straight line form the original point, through the centre to the new point.
On the Cartesian plane a translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and direction
The rule for the transformation above is translation. Translation is a transformation that moves every point of a figure the same distance in the same direction.
translation
A translation.
It's a translation.
Yes.
It is a translation on the Cartesian plane
A transformation created by sliding an object is called a translation. In a translation, every point on the object is shifted by the same distance and in the same direction to create a new position for the object.
A translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and in the same direction on the Cartesian plane
A rotation of 270 degrees counterclockwise is a transformation that turns a figure around a fixed point by 270 degrees in the counterclockwise direction. This rotation can be visualized as a quarter turn in the counterclockwise direction. It is equivalent to rotating the figure three-fourths of a full revolution counterclockwise.
A circle.
An isometry that moves or maps every point of the plane the same distance and direction is a translation, which is one of 4 transformations that can be plotted on the Cartesian plane.
A translation will slide a figure either horizontally, vertically, or both, without changing its orientation or shape. The position of every point on the figure is shifted by the same amount and in the same direction.