From CO.B.6 to CO.B.7: What We Still Need
You already know from CO.B.6:
- Congruence = a rigid motion maps one figure onto the other
- Rigid motions preserve distances and angles
The open question: Does "congruent via rigid motions" mean exactly the same thing as "all six parts match"?
The Biconditional: Two Separate Claims
- Forward: Rigid motion exists ⟹ all 6 pairs match
- Reverse: All 6 pairs match ⟹ rigid motion exists
- Both directions require independent proofs
Correspondence Diagram Showing Color-Coded Vertex Pairs
The notation
Proof Strategy: Forward vs. Reverse Directions
Forward direction (Chunk 2 — straightforward):
- Uses what you already know: rigid motions preserve distances and angles
Reverse direction (Chunk 3 — the construction):
- Requires building a rigid motion from scratch
- Three steps: translate, rotate, reflect if needed
- Relies on a special property of triangles
Check-In: Read the Congruence Notation
Which vertex maps to which? Write the three vertex pairs.
Also: Which side is claimed congruent to
The notation encodes the correspondence — read letter by letter.
Answer: Reading Correspondence from Congruence Notation
, , , , , ,
The third letter corresponds to the third letter — order is everything.
M3: Correspondence comes from the rigid motion — not the alphabet.
Forward Direction: Rigid Motion Implies Matching Parts
If rigid motion
These follow from CO.A.4: rigid motions preserve all distances and all angle measures.
Side Congruence Follows from Distance Preservation
By CO.A.4: rigid motions preserve all distances between point pairs.
, ⟹ , ⟹
Angle Congruence and the CPCTC Result
By CO.A.4: rigid motions preserve all angle measures.
CPCTC — Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are Congruent:
Not a magic rule — a direct consequence of rigid-motion preservation.
CPCTC: Six Congruences at Once
- From one rigid motion, you get six congruences for free
- Three side pairs + three angle pairs
- Use whichever ones your proof needs
Check-In: Applying the Forward Direction
A rigid motion maps
- Name all three pairs of congruent sides.
- Name all three pairs of congruent angles.
- Is
? Explain why or why not.
Pause: work through all three questions before the next slide.
Answer: All Six Pairs from CPCTC
From
- Sides:
, , - Angles:
, , - Is
? Not guaranteed — and
M5: CPCTC gives all 6 pairs — sides AND angles, both.
Reverse Direction: What We Need to Prove
Claim: If all six pairs match, a rigid motion exists mapping
Why is this harder than the forward direction?
- Forward: rigid motion is given — just apply preservation
- Reverse: must construct the rigid motion from scratch
Strategy: Three steps — translate, rotate, reflect if needed.
Reverse Direction Step 1: Translate
Goal: Map vertex
Apply the translation that sends
- Call the image:
where - Translation preserves all side lengths and angles
, so is at distance from
Reverse Direction Step 2: Rotate
Goal: Map
✓ , so is at distance from- Rotate about
by the angle from ray to ray
This maps
Step 2 Result: Two Vertex Pairs Aligned
After Step 2:
Where is
Check-In: Locating C-Double-Prime
After Steps 1–2:
Where must
→ lies on a circle of radius centered at → lies on a circle of radius centered at
Question: How many points satisfy both conditions? Where are they?
Think geometrically before the next slide.
Reverse Direction Step 3: Reflect if Needed
Two circles centered at
is at one intersection point; is at the other (or the same)- If
: done — no reflection needed - If
: reflect over line
Reflecting over
Step 3 Result: Construction Complete
Coordinate Example: Verifying All Six Parts Match
| Side | ||
|---|---|---|
| Short | ||
| Other | ||
| Long |
Execute Step One: Translate Vertex A onto Vertex D
Translation vector:
Execute Step Two: Rotate to Place B-Prime on E
Vector
Execute Step Three: Reflect over Line DE
After Steps 1–2:
Line
The construction maps
Triangle Rigidity: Three Vertices Determine the Shape
A triangle is rigid — three vertices determine the entire figure.
- Once
, , are fixed, all sides and angles are fully determined - No "flexing" possible — the shape cannot change with fixed vertices
Why this matters: After matching three vertices (
Check-In: Does Triangle Rigidity Extend to All Polygons?
You can build a physical triangle from three rigid sticks — it cannot flex.
Question: Can you build a quadrilateral from four rigid sticks that flexes?
Also: Why does this matter for the construction proof?
Think about degrees of freedom before the next slide.
Why the Argument Fails for Quadrilaterals
Consider two quadrilaterals with all sides equal to 4:
- A square: all angles 90°
- A rhombus: angles 70°, 110°, 70°, 110°
Same four side lengths — but different shapes and not congruent.
Quadrilaterals can flex — four side lengths don't determine the shape.
M4: The reverse direction relies on triangle rigidity — not obvious.
Check-In: When Is Step Three Needed?
After Steps 1–2:
What determines whether
Also: If
Think about handedness before the next slide.
Answer: Orientation Determines Whether Reflection Is Needed
Same orientation →
Opposite orientation (mirror image) →
Key: Translations and rotations preserve orientation; reflections reverse it.
At most 3 rigid motions always suffice.
CPCTC as a Proof Tool
The four-step reasoning chain:
- Identify two triangles in the figure
- Establish congruence (find a rigid motion — or use criteria from CO.B.8)
- Apply CPCTC to name the specific pairs you need
- Use those congruences to reach your conclusion
M1: Step 2 must come before Step 3 — always.
Worked Proof: Midpoints Imply Segment Congruence
Given:
Prove:
In
(midpoint of ) (midpoint of ) (vertical angles)
Worked Proof: Applying CPCTC to Conclude Congruence
From the previous slide:
By the reverse direction:
By CPCTC:
Proof structure used:
- Triangles identified → matching parts listed → congruence established → CPCTC applied
Check-In: Prove Angle Equality in a Rhombus
Given: Rhombus
Prove:
Your task:
- Identify two triangles
- List the matching parts
- Establish congruence
- Apply CPCTC to reach
Write the proof before advancing.
Answer: Diagonal of Rhombus Proves Angle Equality
Diagonal
(rhombus — all sides equal) (rhombus — all sides equal) (shared side — reflexive property)
By CPCTC:
Key Takeaways and Misconception Warnings
✓
✓ Forward direction: rigid motion ⟹ all parts match (CO.A.4 preservation)
✓ Reverse direction: all parts match ⟹ rigid motion exists (3 steps)
✓ CPCTC: one congruence gives 6 pairs — 3 sides and 3 angles
M1: Prove congruence first, then invoke CPCTC — never reverse
M2: All six parts required here — CO.B.8 brings shortcuts
M3: Correspondence from the rigid motion, not the alphabet
M4: Reverse direction relies on triangle rigidity — not obvious
M5: CPCTC applies to both sides AND angles — all six, always
Preview: Efficient Triangle Congruence Criteria in CO.B.8
CO.B.7 established: All 6 parts match ⟺ triangles congruent
CO.B.8 will prove: Fewer parts can suffice —
- SAS: Two sides and the included angle
- ASA: Two angles and the included side
- SSS: Three sides alone
Each is a shortcut to the reverse direction of CO.B.7.