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Question
11 triangle abc was rotated about the origin to create triangle abc. which of the following describe this transformation? move the checkmarks to select three answers. a 90° counterclockwise rotation a 180° clockwise rotation a 270° clockwise rotation (x, y) → (-x, -y) (x, y) → (-y, x) (x, y) → (y, -x)
Step1: Identify coordinates of original and rotated points
First, find coordinates of \( A, B, C \) and \( A', B', C' \). From the graph:
- \( A(-4, 3) \), \( B(-3, 4) \), \( C(-1, 2) \)
- \( A'(-3, -5) \)? Wait, no, looking again: Wait, \( A' \) is at \( (-3, -5) \)? Wait, no, let's re - check. Wait, the rotated triangle \( A'B'C' \): \( A' \) seems to be \( (-3, -5) \)? Wait, no, maybe I misread. Wait, actually, let's take a point, say \( A(-4, 3) \), \( A' \) should be such that after rotation. Wait, let's check the transformation rules.
Step2: Analyze rotation rules
- 180° rotation rule: For a 180° clockwise (or counter - clockwise, since 180° rotation is same in both directions) rotation about the origin, the rule is \( (x,y)\to(-x,-y) \). Let's test with point \( A(-4,3) \): \( -x = 4 \), \( -y=-3 \)? No, that's not matching. Wait, maybe I made a mistake in coordinates. Wait, looking at the graph again: \( A \) is at \( (-4, 3) \), \( B \) at \( (-3, 4) \), \( C \) at \( (-1, 2) \). \( A' \) is at \( (-3, -5) \)? No, wait, the lower triangle: \( A' \) is at \( (-3, -5) \)? Wait, no, maybe the coordinates are: \( A(-4,3) \), \( A'(-3, -5) \)? No, that can't be. Wait, maybe I should check the 270° clockwise rotation rule. The rule for 270° clockwise rotation (or 90° counter - clockwise) is \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \)? No, wait, the rule for 90° counter - clockwise is \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \), 90° clockwise is \( (x,y)\to(y, - x) \), 180° is \( (x,y)\to(-x,-y) \), 270° clockwise is \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \)? Wait, no, let's recall:
- 90° counter - clockwise: \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \)
- 90° clockwise: \( (x,y)\to(y, - x) \)
- 180°: \( (x,y)\to(-x,-y) \)
- 270° clockwise (which is equivalent to 90° counter - clockwise): \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \)
- 270° counter - clockwise (equivalent to 90° clockwise): \( (x,y)\to(y, - x) \)
Wait, let's take point \( A(-4,3) \). Let's apply 270° clockwise rotation (rule \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \)): \( -y=-3 \), \( x = - 4 \)? No, that's \( (-3,-4) \), not matching. Wait, maybe the correct rotation is 180°? Wait, no, let's check point \( B(-3,4) \). If we apply 180° rotation: \( (-x,-y)=(3, - 4) \), but \( B' \) is at \( (-4, - 3) \)? Wait, I think I misread the coordinates. Let's re - extract coordinates:
Looking at the grid:
- Original triangle \( ABC \):
- \( A \): x = - 4, y = 3 (so \( A(-4,3) \))
- \( B \): x = - 3, y = 4 (so \( B(-3,4) \))
- \( C \): x = - 1, y = 2 (so \( C(-1,2) \))
- Rotated triangle \( A'B'C' \):
- \( A' \): x = - 3, y = - 5? No, wait, the lower triangle: \( A' \) is at ( - 3, - 5)? No, maybe the y - axis is flipped? Wait, no, the grid has positive y up, negative y down. Wait, \( A' \) is at ( - 3, - 5)? No, that doesn't make sense. Wait, maybe the correct coordinates for \( A' \) are (3, - 3)? No, I think I made a mistake. Let's use the transformation rule \( (x,y)\to(y, - x) \) (270° counter - clockwise or 90° clockwise). For \( A(-4,3) \): \( y = 3 \), \( -x = 4 \), so \( (3,4) \)? No. Wait, the correct approach is:
Let's check the three correct options. The three correct options should be:
- A 270° clockwise rotation (equivalent to 90° counter - clockwise)
- A 90° counter - clockwise rotation (same as 270° clockwise)
- The transformation \( (x,y)\to(-y,x) \) (rule for 90° counter - clockwise/270° clockwise)
Wait, no, let's check the 180° rotation: \( (x,y)\to(-x,-y) \). For \( A(-4,3) \), \( -x = 4 \), \( -y=-3 \), so \( (4,-3) \), not matching. Wait, maybe the coordinates are:
Wait, \( A(-4,3) \), \( A'(-3, - 5) \) is wrong. Let's look at the graph again. The original tr…
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A. A 90° counterclockwise rotation
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E. \( (x, y) \to (-y, x) \)