A rigid motion (or rigid transformation) is a transformation that preserves distances and angle measures.
A transformation of a figure is a mapping that changes the figure's size or position in space, including rotation.
The figure before it is transformed is called the pre-image. The figure after it has been transformed is called the image.
We have two ways to describe a translation algebraically:
Coordinate form: The translation \left(x,y\right) \to \left(x+h,y+k\right) takes the pre-image and moves it h units to the right, and k units up to obtain the image.
Function notation: The translation T_{<h,k>}(A) takes the pre-image, A, and moves it h units to the right and k units up.
It is common to label the corners of figures with letters and to use a dash, called a prime, to label corners of the transformed image. For example, if A was the pre-image, then A' (spoken as "A-prime") is the image.
For the following graph:
Describe the translation in words.
Write the translation in function notation.
Draw the image given from the transformation \left(x,y\right) \to \left(x+1,y-4\right) on the pre-image: