QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- a hexagon will be dilated on a coordinate grid. the hexagon is dilated using the origin as the center of dilation.
- write one scale factor that would result in a hexagon smaller than the original.
- write one scale factor that would result in a hexagon larger than the original.
- how did you know what the scale factor needed to be for each dilation?
- for a smaller hexagon, the scale factor must be
- for a larger hexagon, the scale factor must be
- triangle abc is graphed on a coordinate grid with vertices at a(5, 3), b(3, - 3) and c(-2, 4). triangle abc is dilated by a scale factor of k with the origin as the center of dilation to create triangle abc. circle the ordered pair that represents the coordinates of the vertex c.
(5 + k, 3 + k) (-2 + k, 4 + k) (5k, 3k) (-2k, 4k)
- circle a was dilated to create circle b. triangle pqr was dilated to create triangle pqr. rectangle mnop was dilated to create rectangle mnop. all figures were dilated with the origin as the center of dilation.
draw a line to each grid from the one algebraic representation that correctly describes the dilation.
(x, y)→(2x, 2y) (x, y)→(1/2x, 1/2y) (x, y)→(1/3x, 1/3y) (x, y)→(3x, 3y)
Step1: Determine scale - factor for smaller hexagon
When the scale - factor \(k\) of a dilation is between \(0\) and \(1\) (i.e., \(0 When the scale - factor \(k>1\), the dilated figure is larger than the original. For example, \(k = 2\). When a point \((x,y)\) is dilated with the origin as the center of dilation and a scale - factor \(k\), the new coordinates \((x',y')=(kx,ky)\). Given \(C(-2,4)\) and scale - factor \(k\), the coordinates of \(C'\) are \((-2k,4k)\). For a dilation with scale - factor \(2\), the rule is \((x,y)\to(2x,2y)\) (enlargement). For a dilation with scale - factor \(\frac{1}{2}\), the rule is \((x,y)\to(\frac{1}{2}x,\frac{1}{2}y)\) (reduction). For a dilation with scale - factor \(\frac{1}{3}\), the rule is \((x,y)\to(\frac{1}{3}x,\frac{1}{3}y)\) (reduction). For a dilation with scale - factor \(3\), the rule is \((x,y)\to(3x,3y)\) (enlargement).Step2: Determine scale - factor for larger hexagon
Step3: Find coordinates of \(C'\) after dilation
Step4: Match dilation rules with figures
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2.
- Scale factor for smaller hexagon: \(\frac{1}{2}\)
- Scale factor for larger hexagon: \(2\)
- For a smaller hexagon, the scale factor must be between \(0\) and \(1\). For a larger hexagon, the scale factor must be greater than \(1\).
- \((-2k,4k)\)
- Match based on the size change of the figures. If the figure is enlarged, it corresponds to a scale - factor greater than \(1\) (e.g., \((x,y)\to(2x,2y)\) or \((x,y)\to(3x,3y)\)). If the figure is reduced, it corresponds to a scale - factor between \(0\) and \(1\) (e.g., \((x,y)\to(\frac{1}{2}x,\frac{1}{2}y)\) or \((x,y)\to(\frac{1}{3}x,\frac{1}{3}y)\)).