1 / 25

3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

3.1: Symmetry in Polygons. On the first day of school, Mr Vilani gave his 3 rd grade students 5 new words to spell. On each school day after that he gave them 3 new words to spell. In the first 20 days of school, how many new words had the students been given to spell?. Polygons.

miach
Download Presentation

3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  2. On the first day of school, Mr Vilani gave his 3rd grade students 5 new words to spell. On each school day after that he gave them 3 new words to spell. In the first 20 days of school, how many new words had the students been given to spell? 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  3. Polygons A figure is a polygon iff it is a plane figure formed from 3 or more segments such that each segment intersects exactly 2 others, one at each endpoint, and no 2 segments with a common endpoint are collinear. The segments are the sides of the polygon and the endpoints are the vertices of the polygon. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  4. Classifying Polygons 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  5. Classifying Polygons 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  6. Triangles Defn: A triangle is scalene iff it has no congruent sides. A triangle is isosceles iff it has at least 2 congruent sides. A triangle is equilateral iff all 3 sides are congruent. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  7. Equilateral Polygons Defn: A polygon is equilateral iff all of its sides are congruent. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  8. Equiangular Polygons Defn: A polygon is equiangular iff all of its angles are congruent. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  9. Regular Polygons Defn: A polygon is regular iff it is equilateral and equiangular. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  10. Center of a Regular Polygon Defn: The center of a regular polygon is the point that is equidistant from all vertices of the polygon. Center of the regular polygon 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  11. Central Angle of a Regular Polygon Defn: A central angle of a regular polygon is an angle whose vertex is the center of the regular polygon and whose sides contain 2 consecutive vertices. Central angle of the regular polygon 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  12. The Central Angle of a Regular Polygon The measure, , of a central angle of a regular polygon with n sides is given by the formula: = 360 n 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  13. What is the measure of the central angle of a regular octagon? 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  14. Reflectional Symmetry Defn: A figure has reflectional symmetry iff its reflected image across a line coincides exactly with the preimage. The line is called an axis of symmetry. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  15. Triangle Symmetry Conjecture An axis of symmetry in a triangle is the perpendicular bisector of the side it intersects, and it passes through the vertex of the angle opposite that side of the triangle. An equilateral triangle has 3 axes of symmetry. A strictly isosceles triangle has 1 axis of symmetry. A scalene triangle has 0 axes of symmetry. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  16. Axis of Symmetry for a Triangle axis of symmetry 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  17. By the Triangle Symmetry Property, is the yellow segment an axis of symmetry for the triangle? Why or why not? 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  18. By the Triangle Symmetry Property, is the yellow segment an axis of symmetry for the triangle? Why or why not? 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  19. Rotational Symmetry • Defn: A figure has rotational symmetry iff it has at least one rotation image not counting rotation images of 0° or multiples of 360° that coincide with the preimage. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  20. Rotational Symmetry 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  21. Rotational Symmetry • All geometric figures have 0° (360°) rotational symmetry. If a figure has only 0° (360°) rotational symmetry, it is said to have trivial rotational symmetry. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  22. Rotational Symmetry • n-fold rotational symmetry: A figure that is said to have n-fold rotational symmetry will rotate onto itself n times if the figure is rotated 360°. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  23. Center of Symmetry The center of the rotation which yields the rotational symmetry is also called the center of symmetry. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  24. Describe all symmetries for a regular hexagon. 6-fold rotational symmetry (60°, 120°, 180°, 240°, 300° and 360°=0°) 6 axes of symmetry: the 3 perpendicular bisectors of each pair of opposite sides and the 3 lines containing the center and a vertex. 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

  25. Assignment • Pages 143- 146, • # 10 – 26 (evens), 28 – 32 (all), 34 – 40 (evens), 46 – 50 (all), 52, 54 3.1: Symmetry in Polygons

More Related