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Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Proving Slope Criteria for Lines

Lesson 1 of 2: Why the Criteria Are True

In this lesson:

  • Prove parallel lines have equal slopes
  • Prove perpendicular lines have slopes with product −1
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Prove two non-vertical lines are parallel if and only if they have equal slopes
  2. Prove two non-vertical lines are perpendicular if and only if the product of their slopes is
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

What Does Slope Actually Measure?

You have computed slope as since 8th grade.

  • Slope measures steepness and direction
  • Two lines pointing in the same direction → same slope
  • Parallel lines point in the same direction

So parallel lines must have the same slope — but can we prove it?

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Slope Triangles on Parallel Lines

Two parallel lines on a coordinate grid with congruent slope triangles drawn for each

Both triangles have the same rise-over-run — so both lines have the same slope.

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Translation Preserves the Slope Triangle

  • Translation maps line onto line
  • The same translation maps the slope triangle of onto a congruent triangle on
  • Congruent triangles → equal rise and equal run
  • Therefore

Arrow showing one slope triangle translating to the other along the parallel line direction

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Equal Angles Also Prove Equal Slopes

A line making angle with the positive -axis has slope:

  • Parallel lines make equal angles with any transversal — including horizontal lines
  • So , which means
  • Therefore
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

The Parallel Criterion Is a Biconditional

Two distinct non-vertical lines are parallel if and only if they have equal slopes.

  • Parallel → equal slopes: translation maps one slope triangle to the other (or: equal angles with horizontal)
  • Equal slopes → parallel: lines with the same slope make the same angle with the horizontal, so they never intersect
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Quick Check: Parallel or Not?

Line 1:
Line 2:

Are these lines parallel? Explain using the criterion.

Think before advancing to the answer...

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Answer: Parallel Lines Have Different Intercepts

  • Slope of Line 1:
  • Slope of Line 2:
  • Equal slopes → parallel

Watch out: Same slope AND same intercept → the lines are identical, not parallel.
Parallel requires equal slopes and different y-intercepts.

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Special Case: Vertical and Horizontal Lines

  • Vertical lines: slope is undefined — all vertical lines are parallel to each other
  • Horizontal lines: slope is 0 — all horizontal lines are parallel to each other
  • The "equal slope" criterion covers these naturally: both vertical lines have "the same undefined slope" → parallel
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Now: What About Perpendicular Lines?

You know perpendicular means meeting at a 90° angle.

  • If a line has slope , what slope makes it perpendicular?
  • The answer: — the negative reciprocal
  • But why? Let's prove it with a rotation.
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Rotation Proof: Slope After a 90° Turn

Line through origin with slope m and point (1,m); 90-degree CCW rotation arc maps to (-m,1) on perpendicular line

Rotating by 90° CCW about the origin gives .

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

The Product of Perpendicular Slopes Is Negative One

Original slope , perpendicular slope . Check the product:

Two non-vertical lines are perpendicular if and only if .

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Quick Check: Find the Perpendicular Slope

A line has slope .

  1. What slope is perpendicular to it?
  2. Verify your answer using the product test.

Work it out before advancing...

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Answer: Negative Reciprocal and Product Test

  • Perpendicular slope:

Verify with the product:

Procedure: 4 written as → flip to → negate to

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Second Proof: Pythagorean Theorem Approach

Two lines through the origin with slopes and .

Choose points and .

The lines are perpendicular if and only if at the origin .

Triangle OAB with O at origin, A=(1,m₁), B=(1,m₂); right angle marker at O; sides labeled with distance formulas

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Pythagorean Algebra Gives the Same Result

Compute the three distances:

Set and simplify:

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Special Case: Horizontal and Vertical Lines

  • A horizontal line () is always perpendicular to a vertical line (undefined slope)
  • The product rule does not apply — you cannot compute
  • This case is proven geometrically: they visibly meet at 90°

When to apply the product rule: only when both slopes are defined and nonzero.

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Watch Out: "Negate" Is Not Enough

Common mistake: if slope is , thinking perpendicular slope is . We need the negative reciprocal — flip AND negate.

Given slope Wrong (just negate) Correct (negative reciprocal)

Verify: ✓ but

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Watch Out: Reciprocal Isn't Always Enough

Another trap: slopes and look like perpendicular partners.

They're reciprocals — but not negative reciprocals.

Draw the lines: both go upward to the right — they're not at 90°.

The perpendicular to slope is slope , not .

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Key Takeaways

Parallel criterion: equal slopes parallel (for distinct non-vertical lines)

Perpendicular criterion: perpendicular (non-vertical, non-horizontal)

Special cases: all vertical lines are parallel; horizontal ⊥ vertical

⚠️ Perpendicular slope = negative reciprocal — flip the fraction AND negate

⚠️ Slopes 2 and have product 1 — NOT perpendicular

⚠️ Parallel lines: same slope, different y-intercepts

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5
Slope Criteria for Lines | Lesson 1 of 2

Coming Up in Lesson 2

Now you know why the criteria are true.

In Lesson 2, you will use them to:

  • Write the equation of a line parallel to a given line through a point
  • Write the equation of a line perpendicular to a given line through a point
  • Find altitudes and perpendicular bisectors of geometric figures
  • Verify right angles using the slope product test
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.B.5