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
On the Cartesian plane a translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and direction
To find the rate of change. Velocity, for example, is the rate of change of distance - in a specified direction. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.
On the Cartesian plane a relfection in a line produces a mirror image On the Cartesian plane a translation moves every point on a shape the same distance and in the same direction
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.
translation
A translation.
A translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and in the same direction on the Cartesian plane
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.
It's a translation.
the answer is translation, i had to know the answer to that question for a worksheet
Yes.
On the Cartesian plane a translation moves every point on a shape in the same distance and direction
-- Displacement is the straight-line difference between where you ended and where you started, regardless of the route you actually took. -- Distance is every inch you covered on the way there, including every curve, round-the-block, double-back, and side-trip to see the sites. -- Distance can never be less than displacement.
Every Direction Is North was created in 2006.
In Every Direction was created on 2011-02-22.