What are the translation rules?
Well, mathematically speaking, they’re the critical ingredients for isometric movements within a rigid body.
Now that may sound confusing at first, but that’s why we’re going to take this step-by-step in today’s geometry lesson.
So let’s get started!
A translation is sometimes referred to as a slide, shift, or glide as it maps (moves) all points of a figure the same distance and in the same direction.
In other words, imagine you put your right hand down on a flat surface. This is your preimage. Without changing the shape of your hand, you slide your hand along the surface to a new location. This is your image.
That’s all there is to translations… slide an object, without changing its shape, to a new location.
This means that a translation is an isometric transformation which means that the preimage and image are congruent figures, as ck-12 accurately states.
So how do we represent translations mathematically?
We use vectors to represent a translation. Which means we need direction (up, down, left, or right) and magnitude (length of units).
There are three ways we describe a translation:
- Words
- Coordinate Notation
- Component Form of a Vector
As seen in the example below, we will learn how to take a preimage (triangle ABC) and translate it using vectors to find its image (triangle A’B’C’).
In the following video, you’ll learn how to represent a translation, draw an interpretation given a transformation formula, and also discover how composite reflections can be represented as a translation.
Therefore, allowing us to discover a formula for calculating the distance between the original figure and the final image.
Video – Lesson & Examples
38 min
- Introduction to translations
- 00:00:27 – What is a translation? How do we describe a translation? (Examples #1-2)
- Exclusive Content for Member’s Only
- 00:12:12 – Describe the translation in words, coordinate notation, and component vector form (Example #3)
- 00:20:56 – Graph the transformation given the translation rule (Example #4)
- 00:30:09 – How do two consecutive reflections equals one translation?
- 00:40:27 – Identify the following given consecutive reflections (Example #5)
- Practice Problems with Step-by-Step Solutions
- Chapter Tests with Video Solutions
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