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. We can also think of a transformation as a function, where the input values make up the figure that is being transformed.
The figure before it is transformed is called the pre-image. The figure after it has been transformed is called the image.
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.
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.
The movement h units right and k units up can be represented as a directed line segment. So we can think of a translation as moving the pre-image along the directed line segment to get the image.
Since every point in the pre-image is moved in the same direction and distance, every line segment from a pre-image point to its corresponding image point will be parallel to the directed line segment that represents the translation.
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:
Consider the figure \triangle ABC and the directed line segment v.
Describe the translation represented by the directed line segment v.
Translate the figure \triangle ABC by the directed line segment v.