Exercises: Use Rigid Motions to Define and Determine Congruence
Work through each section in order. For problems that ask you to find a rigid motion, verify your answer by checking every vertex.
Warm-Up: Review What You Know
These problems review skills you already know from earlier in the unit.
Which of the following is the formal definition of a rigid motion?
Triangle has vertices , , and .
After a translation by vector , what are the coordinates
of the image vertex ?
Which property do all rigid motions (translations, reflections, rotations) share?
Fluency Practice
Apply rigid motions and the definition of congruence to answer each problem.
According to the rigid-motion definition, two figures are congruent if and only if:
Triangle has vertices , , and .
It is reflected over the -axis. In which quadrant does vertex land,
and does the reflection reverse the orientation of the triangle?
Triangle has vertices , , and .
It is rotated counterclockwise about the origin. Which quadrant
contains the image vertex ?
Triangle has vertices , , .
A student claims that to verify a rigid motion maps to a target triangle,
it is sufficient to check that the three vertex images match the three target vertices.
Is this claim correct?
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Which single rigid motion maps onto ?
Mixed Practice
These problems test the same skills in different ways.
A student says: "These two triangles are congruent because they look the same size
to me." Which response best identifies the flaw in this reasoning?
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Describe a single rigid motion that maps onto ,
and verify it by showing where each vertex of maps.
Two figures are related by a dilation with scale factor centered at the origin.
Which statement correctly describes their relationship?
Triangle is congruent to triangle . A student says the
rotation about the midpoint of is the only rigid motion that maps
onto . Is this correct?
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Are and congruent?
Word Problems
Read each scenario. Use the rigid-motion definition of congruence to answer the questions.
A design program generates two triangles on a coordinate grid.
Triangle has vertices , , and .
Triangle has vertices , , and .
A programmer wants to confirm the two triangles are congruent by finding a
rigid motion.
As a preliminary check, which rigid motion should the programmer test first,
based on the positions of the two triangles?
Verify the rigid motion from part (a) by showing the image of each vertex
of under a rotation about the origin, and
confirm it matches the corresponding vertex of .
The programmer finds another sequence of rigid motions that also maps
onto (a reflection followed by a rotation).
What does this imply about the congruence of the triangles?
Find the Mistake
Each problem shows student reasoning that contains an error.
Identify the mistake and choose the best explanation.
Alex looked at two triangles:
Triangle with vertices , , , and
Triangle with vertices , , .
Alex said: "These triangles are NOT congruent because they are in different
positions — a congruent figure must be in the same place."
Which statement best identifies Alex's error?
Jamie was given two triangles on a coordinate grid and wrote:
"Triangle and Triangle look the same size to me when I compare them
visually, so they must be congruent. I don't need to find a rigid motion or measure
anything — my eyes tell me they are the same shape and size."
What is the fundamental flaw in Jamie's reasoning?
Challenge Problems
These problems require multi-step reasoning. Explain your thinking clearly.
Figure is congruent to figure via rigid motion (a reflection over
the -axis). Figure is congruent to figure via rigid motion
(a translation by ). Describe a single sequence of
rigid motions that maps directly onto , and explain why this sequence
proves without needing to compare and directly.
The brief states: "Any congruence can be achieved by at most three reflections."
Use the three equivalence relation properties of congruence (reflexive, symmetric,
transitive) to explain why the following chain of congruences is valid:
Triangle Triangle , Triangle Triangle ,
Triangle Triangle . Therefore Triangle Triangle .
Identify which property or properties you use at each step.