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question 3 (multiple choice worth 1 points) (03.03r lc) which method an…

Question

question 3 (multiple choice worth 1 points) (03.03r lc) which method and additional information would prove δonp and δmnl similar by the aa similarity postulate? diagram of triangles with points l, m, n, o, p and line k use a rigid transformation to prove that ∠opn ≅ ∠mln use rigid and nonrigid transformations to prove that (\frac{pn}{mn} = \frac{ln}{on}) use a rigid transformation to prove that ∠npo ≅ ∠lnm use rigid and nonrigid transformations to prove that (\frac{lm}{on} = \frac{pn}{mn})

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze the AA (Angle - Angle) similarity postulate, which states that if two angles of one triangle are congruent to two angles of another triangle, the triangles are similar. Also, vertical angles are congruent, so $\angle ONP\cong\angle MNL$ (vertical angles formed by intersecting lines). We need one more pair of congruent angles.

Analyzing Option 1:
  • Step 1: Recall AA Similarity and Vertical Angles
  • AA similarity needs two pairs of congruent angles. We know $\angle ONP\cong\angle MNL$ (vertical angles). If we can show another pair of angles congruent, say $\angle OPN\cong\angle MLN$ using a rigid transformation (which preserves angle measures), then we have two pairs of congruent angles ($\angle ONP\cong\angle MNL$ and $\angle OPN\cong\angle MLN$), satisfying AA similarity.
  • Step 2: Analyze other options
  • Option 2 and 4 involve proving proportional sides, which is related to SAS or SSS similarity, not AA. Option 3: $\angle NPO$ and $\angle LNM$ - $\angle LNM$ is the same as $\angle ONP$ (vertical angle), and $\angle NPO$ and $\angle ONP$ are not the right pair to prove similarity with $\triangle MNL$.
Brief Explanations

To prove $\triangle ONP$ and $\triangle MNL$ similar by AA, we need two pairs of congruent angles. Vertical angles $\angle ONP\cong\angle MNL$. Using a rigid transformation to prove $\angle OPN\cong\angle MLN$ gives the second pair of congruent angles, satisfying AA. Other options involve side proportions (for SAS/SSS) or incorrect angle pairs.

Answer:

Use a rigid transformation to prove that $\angle OPN\cong\angle MLN$