QUESTION IMAGE
Question
here are the endpoints of the segments jk, mn, and pq.
j(-2, 1), k(3, 4)
m(-6, 1), n(-7, 7)
p(-5, -8), q(-6, -2)
follow the directions below.
(a) find the length of each segment.
give an exact answer (not a decimal approximation).
jk =
mn =
pq =
(b) check all statements that are true below.
Part (a)
To find the length of a segment with endpoints \((x_1, y_1)\) and \((x_2, y_2)\), we use the distance formula: \(d = \sqrt{(x_2 - x_1)^2 + (y_2 - y_1)^2}\)
For segment \(JK\) with \(J(-2, 1)\) and \(K(3, 4)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -2\), \(y_1 = 1\), \(x_2 = 3\), \(y_2 = 4\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
For segment \(MN\) with \(M(-6, 1)\) and \(N(-7, 7)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -6\), \(y_1 = 1\), \(x_2 = -7\), \(y_2 = 7\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
For segment \(PQ\) with \(P(-5, -8)\) and \(Q(-6, -2)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -5\), \(y_1 = -8\), \(x_2 = -6\), \(y_2 = -2\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
Part (b) (assuming common true statements based on lengths)
If we check statements about congruence (segments with equal length are congruent):
- \(MN\) and \(PQ\) both have length \(\sqrt{37}\), so " \(MN \cong PQ\)" is true.
- \(JK\) has length \(\sqrt{34}\), different from \(MN\) and \(PQ\), so " \(JK \cong MN\)" and " \(JK \cong PQ\)" are false.
Final Answers (Part a)
\(JK = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{34}}\)
\(MN = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{37}}\)
\(PQ = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{37}}\)
(For part b, the true statement would be \(MN \cong PQ\) depending on the given options, but since options are not fully visible, the length calculations are as above.)
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Part (a)
To find the length of a segment with endpoints \((x_1, y_1)\) and \((x_2, y_2)\), we use the distance formula: \(d = \sqrt{(x_2 - x_1)^2 + (y_2 - y_1)^2}\)
For segment \(JK\) with \(J(-2, 1)\) and \(K(3, 4)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -2\), \(y_1 = 1\), \(x_2 = 3\), \(y_2 = 4\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
For segment \(MN\) with \(M(-6, 1)\) and \(N(-7, 7)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -6\), \(y_1 = 1\), \(x_2 = -7\), \(y_2 = 7\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
For segment \(PQ\) with \(P(-5, -8)\) and \(Q(-6, -2)\):
Step 1: Identify coordinates
\(x_1 = -5\), \(y_1 = -8\), \(x_2 = -6\), \(y_2 = -2\)
Step 2: Apply distance formula
\[
\]
Part (b) (assuming common true statements based on lengths)
If we check statements about congruence (segments with equal length are congruent):
- \(MN\) and \(PQ\) both have length \(\sqrt{37}\), so " \(MN \cong PQ\)" is true.
- \(JK\) has length \(\sqrt{34}\), different from \(MN\) and \(PQ\), so " \(JK \cong MN\)" and " \(JK \cong PQ\)" are false.
Final Answers (Part a)
\(JK = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{34}}\)
\(MN = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{37}}\)
\(PQ = \boldsymbol{\sqrt{37}}\)
(For part b, the true statement would be \(MN \cong PQ\) depending on the given options, but since options are not fully visible, the length calculations are as above.)