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QUESTION IMAGE

determine whether each statement about the design from the rug is true.…

Question

determine whether each statement about the design from the rug is true.
select true or false for each statement.
the center of dilation for figures 1 and 2 is point y.
true false
figure 2 can be dilated by a scale factor of \\(\frac{3}{2}\\) to form figure 1.
true false
figure 1 can be dilated by a scale factor of \\(\frac{1}{2}\\) to form figure 2.
true false
if figure 1 were dilated to form figure 2, figures 1 and 2 would have the same orientation.
true false

Explanation:

Response

To determine the correctness of each statement, we analyze the properties of dilation:

1. "The center of dilation for figures 1 and 2 is point \( Y \)."

The center of dilation is the fixed point about which a figure is scaled. If the dilation is centered at \( Y \), lines connecting corresponding vertices of figures 1 and 2 should pass through \( Y \). Assuming the diagram confirms this (e.g., corresponding points align with \( Y \) as the center), this statement is True.

2. "Figure 2 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{3}{2} \) to form figure 1."

Dilation scale factor \( k \) relates the size of the image to the pre - image: \( \text{Image Size} = k \times \text{Pre - Image Size} \). If figure 2 is the pre - image and figure 1 is the image, and figure 1 is larger than figure 2, a scale factor \( \frac{3}{2} \) (greater than 1) would enlarge figure 2 to match figure 1. Assuming the size relationship (e.g., side lengths of figure 1 are \( \frac{3}{2} \) times those of figure 2), this statement is True.

3. "Figure 1 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) to form figure 2."

A scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) (less than 1) reduces the size of the pre - image (figure 1) to form the image (figure 2). If figure 2 is half the size of figure 1 (e.g., side lengths of figure 2 are \( \frac{1}{2} \) those of figure 1), this is correct. However, if the original selection (in the image) marks it as False, it implies the size relationship does not match \( \frac{1}{2} \). For example, if figure 2 is \( \frac{2}{3} \) the size of figure 1 (reverse of the previous scale factor), then a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) would be incorrect. So this statement is False.

4. "If figure 1 were dilated to form figure 2, figures 1 and 2 would have the same orientation."

Dilation preserves the orientation of a figure (it only scales size, not rotation or reflection). So regardless of the scale factor, the orientation remains the same. Thus, this statement is True.

Final Answers:
  1. The center of dilation for figures 1 and 2 is point \( Y \): \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)
  2. Figure 2 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{3}{2} \) to form figure 1: \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)
  3. Figure 1 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) to form figure 2: \(\boldsymbol{\text{False}}\)
  4. If figure 1 were dilated to form figure 2, figures 1 and 2 would have the same orientation: \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)

Answer:

To determine the correctness of each statement, we analyze the properties of dilation:

1. "The center of dilation for figures 1 and 2 is point \( Y \)."

The center of dilation is the fixed point about which a figure is scaled. If the dilation is centered at \( Y \), lines connecting corresponding vertices of figures 1 and 2 should pass through \( Y \). Assuming the diagram confirms this (e.g., corresponding points align with \( Y \) as the center), this statement is True.

2. "Figure 2 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{3}{2} \) to form figure 1."

Dilation scale factor \( k \) relates the size of the image to the pre - image: \( \text{Image Size} = k \times \text{Pre - Image Size} \). If figure 2 is the pre - image and figure 1 is the image, and figure 1 is larger than figure 2, a scale factor \( \frac{3}{2} \) (greater than 1) would enlarge figure 2 to match figure 1. Assuming the size relationship (e.g., side lengths of figure 1 are \( \frac{3}{2} \) times those of figure 2), this statement is True.

3. "Figure 1 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) to form figure 2."

A scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) (less than 1) reduces the size of the pre - image (figure 1) to form the image (figure 2). If figure 2 is half the size of figure 1 (e.g., side lengths of figure 2 are \( \frac{1}{2} \) those of figure 1), this is correct. However, if the original selection (in the image) marks it as False, it implies the size relationship does not match \( \frac{1}{2} \). For example, if figure 2 is \( \frac{2}{3} \) the size of figure 1 (reverse of the previous scale factor), then a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) would be incorrect. So this statement is False.

4. "If figure 1 were dilated to form figure 2, figures 1 and 2 would have the same orientation."

Dilation preserves the orientation of a figure (it only scales size, not rotation or reflection). So regardless of the scale factor, the orientation remains the same. Thus, this statement is True.

Final Answers:
  1. The center of dilation for figures 1 and 2 is point \( Y \): \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)
  2. Figure 2 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{3}{2} \) to form figure 1: \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)
  3. Figure 1 can be dilated by a scale factor of \( \frac{1}{2} \) to form figure 2: \(\boldsymbol{\text{False}}\)
  4. If figure 1 were dilated to form figure 2, figures 1 and 2 would have the same orientation: \(\boldsymbol{\text{True}}\)