Collection of exercises in SYMMETRIC TRANSFORMATIONS for Programme Primary school teachers Leni Lvovskä October 2019 Inspiration is a state in which the soul perceives impressions more vividly, understands and classifies ideas, and thus better explains them. It is just as necessary in geometry as in poetry. Alexander Sergejevic Puskin (1799 - 1837)[11] Introduction This book of exercises was developed in order to support the teaching of geometry to future elementary school teachers. This book offers the students a set of solved tasks as well as a number of further exercises specifically chosen for the topics of Symmetric transformations, where study materials are missing to a similar extent and students are forced to choose tasks from several different sources. At the same time, it follows the latest trend of cross-curricular subject and points out in the presented examples and exercises the connection of geometry with other subjects and especially with the world around us. Many tasks work with the magnetic kit Geomag. If you do not have it, these tasks can be demonstrated using skewers and balls of modeling. For the creation of illustrations, the GeoGebra software was used. It is therefore easy to use the GeoGebra tutorial software directly in the classroom or on a standalone task. There are direct references to selected dynamic applets and stepped constructions for specific constructions. This text was developed with the support of the project MUNI / FR / 1193/2018, Innovation of four subjects Geometry for Teachers of the 1st level of the elementary school with Geomag kit and Geogebra educational software at the Faculty of Education, Masaryk University in Brno. Many thanks to Helena Durnová for the preparation of the English version of this text and Pavel Kříž for the support of the typesetting in the KTfrjXsystem. 4 1 Basic properties of symmetries Mapping in a plane assigns each point X of the plane exactly one point X' of that plane. We call the point X preimage and the point X' image. Symmetrical transformation in geometry is such a mapping between Euclidian space that preserves the lengths. A symmetrical mapping of a space onto itself is called a symmetry. • Symmetry preserves the lengths, i.e. for any two points X, Y and their images X', Y' the equality XY = X'Y' holds. • By composing two symmetries, a symmetry is created again. • Each symmetry is an ijective mapping. • An inversion of symmetry is also a symmetry. • Identity is a symmetry. • All symmetries of an Euclidian space with the operation of transformation composition form a group of symmetries, the so-called euclidian group. • If A, B, C and A1, B', C are two triplets of points which do not lie on the same line and if AB = A'B', BC ^ B'C a AC = A'C, then there is only one symmetry in the plane in which the image of A is A', the image of B is B', and the image of C is C (the so-called theorem of definiry a symmetry in a plane). In this text we will only deal with symmetries in a plane. 5 2 Basic types of symmetries in the plane To clarify the terms we use in the tasks bellow, we give an overview of the basic symmetries in the plane and their properties. translational symmetry All points of the plane are shifted in the same direction by the same distance and the distance is given by the oriented line, resp. vector. The image is uniquely determined by the offset vector. T(D^) : A ABC ^ AA'B'C reflectional symmetry A transformation given by the symmetry axis, which divides the plane into two half-planes. The corresponding points lie on the perpendicular to the axis of symmetry in opposite half-planes and are equidistant from the axis. AB) : AASD ^ ABSC, b) translational symmetry T(A^) : AASD i—> ASBC, c) translational symmetry T(S~A) :ASBC \—> AASD, d) identity Id : ADCS h-> ADCS, Excercise 2.25. The regular octagon ABCDEFGH is given. Specify the symmetries which reproduce: a) AADE^ ABGF, b) AACD^ AEGH, c) AACD^ ADEG, d) AACD^ AGED, 15 Example 2.26. Draw the image if the regular pentagon ABCDE in: a) the point reflectional symmetry with the point D, b) the reflectional symmetry with the axis AC, c) the translational symmetry given by vector CE, d) the rotational symmetry given by point C and the angle 60°. Solution: a) The pentagon ABCDE in the point reflectional symmetry with the point D. The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/m/saxej 6u9#material/kzb9kwdm b) The pentagon ABCDE in the reflectional symmetry with the axis AC. The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/m/saxej 6u9#material/xmygytx8 16 c) The pentagon ABODE in the translational symmetry given by UÉ. D'l D p / * \ ki/ s c q E' \ r A'U4 B'l k5 A B Zápis konstrukce: 1) pětiúhelník ABCDE 2) u ... vektor posunutí 3) ~ p; ~ p II CE A D e *-* p 4) k,;k, (D, |CE|) 5) D'; D' E k, íl p obdobným způsobem sestrojíme zbylé body 6) E1; E' e k2 fl « q 7) C ; C e k3 n „ q 8) A'; A1 e k4 fl « r 9) B'; B' e k5 n « r 10) pětiúhelník A'B'C'D'E' KM «■ 10/10 M- « ® 2 s '.jsi The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/m/saxej 6u9#material/p59bhmen d) The pentagon ABCDE in the rotational symmetry given by point C and the angle 60°. Zápis konstrukce: 1) pětiúhelník ABCDE 2) k,;^ (C, |BC|) The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/m/saxej6u9#material/tpjxeurj 17 Example 2.27. Specify all the symmetries which reproduce (map onto itself): a) an equilateral triangle, b) a regular pentagon, c) a regular hexagon. Solution: In any symmetry which reproduce any of regular n-gons, the center of the circumcircle is a self-asociated point Using the properties of regular n-gons and symmetries in the plane, we obtain the following results: a) There are six symmetries of an equilaterla triangle that map it onto itself: Id, Ci(oi), 02(02), 03(03), ^1(5,120°), ^(5,240°), i. e. identity, three reflectional symmetries with axes being the axes of the three sides, two rotations with the center in the circumcenter of the triangel and the corresponding angle. b) There are ten symmetries of a regular pentagon that map it onto itself: Id, 0,(0,), 02(02), 03(03), 04(o4), 05(o5), ft!(£,72°), n2(S,U4°), 72-3(iS, 216°), 72-4(iS, 288°), i. e. identity, five reflectional symmetries with axes being the axes of the its sides, four rotations with their center in circumcenter and the corresponding angles. c) There are 12 symmetries a regular hexagon that map it onto itself: Id, S(S), OxK), 02(o2), 03(03), 04(o4), 05(o5), Oe(o6), 7^(5,60°), n2(S,120°), ^(5,240°), 7e4(.S,300o), i. e. identity, point reflection symmetry, six reflectional symmetries — three with axes being the axes of its sides and three with the axes incident with the pairs of opposite vertices, four rotations with their center in circumcenter and the corresponding angles. 18 Excercise 2.28. In the picture you can see four object in a square network. a) Decide between which shapes there is symmetry in the figures. b) Determine the found symmetry into direct and indirect. c) Determine the symmetry and defining elements. |a) c) d) 19 Example 2.29. Specify all the symmetries which convert the square ABCD into A'B'C'D'. U každého zobrazení zapište i jeho určiújící prvky. A) B) A=A' B=B' A=C C) B=B' A=D' B=C A=B' B=A ♦ : Solution: A) the reflectional symmetry with the axis AB, B) the rotational symmetry given by point B and the angle 90°, C) the translational symmetry given by D~A, D) the point reflectional symmetry with the point at the center of line segment AB. 20 Excercise 2.30. Sestrojte kosoctverec ABCD tak, aby \AB\ = \BD\. Specify all the symmetries which convert equilateral triangle ABD into triangle, which creates together with triangle ABD rhombus ABCD. Example 2.31. The picture shows a plan of the Romanesque church of Sainte Foy in Conques, France. Find the symmetries in the image and draw them: , e.i. redraw the section of plan a) in translational symmetry b) in rotational symmetry, c) in point reflection symmetry d) in reflectional symmetry. Solution: See the appendix at the end of the text. Example 2.32. The picture shows the star vault of the Renaissance castle Náměšť na Hané. Find all symmetry axes in both vaults and mark the center of symmetry. Try to suggest the coloring of the image so that: a) 1 axis , b) 2 axes, c) 3 axes, d) 4 axes souměrnosti of reflectional symmetry Solution: Example of coloring the first vault in the appendix at the end of the text. 21 Excercise 2.33. In the picture you can see a nor plan of the church of St. John of Nepomuk at Zelena hora in the shape of a five-pointed star: a) Find all axes of symmetry. b) By how many degrees do we need to turn the shape, so that one point of the star maps into the neighbouring one? c) Choose one axis and color the nor plan it according to it. Excercise 2.34. In the picture you can see the rosette in the La Seu cathedral in Mallorce. In it, find a translational symmetry, a rotational symmetry, a point reflection symmetry and a reflectional symmetry. 22 Excercise 2.35. In the picture you can see the mandala well known as Flower of Life. a) Find all axes of symmetry. b) Color the mandala so that the number of symmetry axes changes to 2. c) Is it possible to color the mandala to be a point reflection symmetrical but not a reflection symmetrical? Justify. Example 2.36. Name the road signs in the picture and specify the number of symmetry axes. For your homework, shoot additional tags on the road and group them by number of symmetry axes. Solution: See the appendix at the end of the text. 23 3 Composition of symmetries Example 3.1. Complete the following statement correctly: 1. The composition of (two) translational symmetries is............. 2. The composition of two point reflection symmetries is............. 3. The composition of two rotations with a common center is.......... 4. The composition of two reflectional symmetries with a common axis is................ 5. The composition of two reflectional symmetries with different parallel axes is.......... 6. The composition of two reflectional symmetries with intersecting axes is.......... For each of your statements, draw a suitable picture. Solution: 1) The composition of (two) translational symmetries is a translational symmetry. 2) The composition of two point reflection symmetries is a translational symmetry. 3) The composition of two rotations with a common center is a rotational symmetry with the same center. 4) The composition of two reflectional symmetries with a common axis is an identity. 5) The composition of two reflectional symmetries with different parallel axes is a translational symmetry. 6) The composition of two reflectional symmetries with intersecting axes is a rotational symmetry with the center in the intersection of the axes. Excercise 3.2. An equilateral triangle ABC is given. Si, S2 and S3 are the centers of its sides AB, BC, CD. Determine the image of ABC in F = Si o 6*2 o 6*3, where Si, 62, 6*3 are point reflections with centers Si, S2, S3, respectively. Determmine the resulting mapping F. Excercise 3.3. The square ABCD map first in the translational symmetry T(Ut>) and the image A'B'C'D' then in rotation 7Z specified by the D and angle 90°. Determine the composition / = 1Z o T. Excercise 3.4. The rhombus ABCD map first in the reflectional symmetry O with the axis DC and the image A'B'C'D' then in the rotation 1Z specified by the point C and angle a = \<£DCB\. Determine the composition / = UoO. 24 Example 3.5. The square ABCD map first in the reflectional symmetry 0\ with the axis BC and the image A'B'C'D' in the reflectional symmetry O2 with the axis BD. Determine the composition / = O2 0 0\. Solution: Resultin mapping is 7Z(B, +90°). b °1 B. C c D' / p / Zápis konstrukce: q B" 1) čtverec ABCD 2) *»(>,; «o, = « BC 3) D' : 0(0,): D —. D' a / A G"~4 B B'\ V2 A' 4) A'; 0(0,): A-> A' 5) B' ; B' = B C : C = C ... B, C jsou samodružnó body 6) čtverec A'B'C'D' 7) « o2; « o2 = « BD 8) C" ; 0 (o2): C • C" r D" 1« « A'y /s <, 11/11 «. w -A 9) An;0(o2):A'^AM 10) B"; B" = B'... B' je samodružný bod pomocí kolmic dorýsujeme bod D" V 11) čtverec A"B"C"D" ® 2 _ s '-^ The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/m/saxej 6u9#material/p59bhmen d" A" 25 Excercise 3.6. A pair of congruent triangles, ABC and KLM, is given of the triangle KLM maps onto the corresponding vertex of the triangle ABC. (Make use of the fact that the pair preimage- image uniquely defines the reflectional symmetry.) Construct two reflectional symmetries in sucha way that the resulting composition of these symmetries maps the triangle KLM onto the triangle ABC. Hint: Use two reflectional symmetries. Choose the first symmetry so that a chosen point Choose the second reflectional symmetry in such a way that the image created by the first symmetry would map onto the triangle ABC. 26 4 Proof tasks Example 4.1. In planar symmetry, let a point A maps into point A', a point B maps into point B', and a point C maps point C". Prove that if point C lies between points A and B, then point C" lies between points A' and 5'. Solution: From the definition of plane symmetry, the following relations are valid for points A, B, C and their images A', B', C: A'C' = AC, B'C' = BC, A'B' = AB (1) Figure 1 If point C is between points A and B, then AC + CB = AB valid. Due to (1) A'C + C'B' = A'B' is also valid, i.e. the point C lies between the points A' and B'. The statement we are proving also follows from the theorem which says that in a symmetry in a plane, the image of the line segment AB is a line segment A'B' of the same length as AB. That proof is part of the proof of that theorem. Example 4.2. Z is a plane symmetry that has two different self-associated points. Does this symmetry still have any self-associated points? Solution: Let us denote the self-associated points as A, B, and their images in the given symmetry / mapping as A', B'. According to the task assigned, A = A', B = B'. The image of the line segment AB is thus the line segment AB. If point X lies between the points A, B, then point X' lies between points A', B', i.e. also between points A, B and the following holds: AX = AX' (also BX = BX'), i.e. X = X'. The answer to the question is thus positive. Furthermore, it is evident that in mapping Z each point of the line segment AB is self-associated. By analogy, it is easy to show that not only the points of the line segment AB are self-associated, but also all the points of the straight line containing AB are self-associated: If point Y lies on the straight line AB and if it e.g. holds that point B lies between points A, Y, then point B lies between points A, Y'. As BY' = BY', then Y = Y'. 27 In the case when the considered point of the straight line AB lies on the half-line opposite to the half-line AB, we proceed in a similar way. Any symmetry Z that has at least two self-associated points therefore has infinitely many self-associated points; all the points of the straight line determined by two self-associated points are self-associated. Example 4.3. Prove that any symmetry in a plane in which there are three non-collinear self-associated points, every point is self-associated, i.e. such a symmetry is identity. Solution: As follows from the results stated in example 4.2, each point of the straight lines AB, BC, AC is self-associated. If X is any point in the plane not lying on any of these straight lines, we can always construct a straight line that passes through X and intersects at least two of these lines in two different points (prove). THese points (in fig. ?? denoted as Y, Z) are self-associated, and thus also the point X is, as follows from 4.2, is self-associated, and hence each point of the plane is self-associated and the given mapping is an identity. Remark: From the solutions of examples 4.2 and 4.3, it is evident that if a symmetry in a plane has two different self-associated points, then such mapping is either reflectional symmetry with the axis given by these points, or an identity (in the cases when the mapping has another self-associated point, not lying on the straight line given by the two self-associated points). Example 4.4. Two different points P, P' are given. Determine at least one symmetry in which point P' is the image of P. Solution: Based on the properties of the individual types of symmetries in a plane it is evident that point P' is the image of P in: a) reflectional symmetry with the axis being the axis of the line segment PP' (Fig. 2a), b) point reflection symmetry with the center in the midpoint O of the line PP', c) rotational symmetry with the center S lying on the axis of the line segment PP' and oriented angle X °2 S 1 > x1 =X' Figure 4 d) Let X ^ oi and X ^ o2. Then Xx ^ o2. Denote the intersection of the straigth line XX\ with the axis o\ as X0. The points X, S, X\ do not lie on the same straight line. For the triangle XSXi, the following holds: XS = SXi and the line o\ is its axis of symmetry, 30 i.e. -qXSXo =-$.XqSXi. Denote further the intersection of the line X\X' with the axis 02 as X". The points Xi, S, X' also do not lie on the same straight line. For the triangle XiSX' the following holds: XtS = X'S and o2 is its axis of symmetry, i.e. <$X1SX" ^<$X"SX'. The angle -qXSX' is the graphic sum of the angles <$XSXi, <$XiSX', i.e. p, \S, -H- p\ = d\, \0, -H- p\ = d2. Construct all the straight lines parallel to p, on which the circles k, I cut chord of the same length. Excercise 5.17. Construct all the triangles ABC, if you know: a + b + c = o, kde o = 12 cm, a = 45°, /3 = 75°. Example 5.18. The straight line p, the circle k and triangle ABC are given. Construct all the line segments XY such that X lies on the circle k, Y on the perimeter of the triangle ABC, the line segment XY is perpendicular to p and the center of the line segment XY lies on the straightline p. The construction step by step: https://www.geogebra.org/rn/HxhzBUjd 35 Appendix 1 Solution to excercise 2.31 Examples of symmetries in the floor plan: reflectional symmetry with the axis o of the floor plan of the whole cathedral, rotational symmetry with the center O and angle90°, rotational symmetry with the center P and angle , point reflection with the center O, translational symmetry given by the vector etc. Solution to excercise 2.32 Examples of colority a) with one axis of symmetry, b) with two axes of symmetry, d) with four axes of symmetry. Case c) with two axes of symmetry cannot be coloured. 36 Solution to excercise 2.36 No entry of all vehicles (in both directions) - infinitely many axes, Give right of way - 3 osy, Stop, give right of way - no axis, No entry of all vehicles in one direction - 2 axes, Main road - 4 axes. 37 Appendix 2 Pass the exam (group activity) The following material presents a leaf method that can be successfully used, for example, to repeat terms. Copy prepared terms - make as many copies of the entire set as there are groups. Cut them into leaves and give each set of terms one group. The goal is to first correctly assign the other terms from the entire set to all underlined terms. (For example, we can ask students to add every picture underlined with a suitable image.) glide reflection symmetry reflectional symmetry identity point reflection symmetry rotational symmetry translational symmetry • oriented line, resp. vector • fixed point, oriented angle • the source as well as the image lie on the straight line which pass throught the self-associated point • each point maps into itself • the source as well as the image lie on the perpendicular to the symmetry axis • the composition of reflectional symmetry and translation in the direction of the axis • direct symmetry • direct symmetry • direct symmetry • direct symmetry indirect symmetry indirect symmetry a straight line of self-associated points one self-associated point one self-associated point no self-associated point one self-associated point each point is a self-associated point The following figure shows an example of the result of such a group activity: 39 Contents 1 Basic properties of symmetries 5 2 Basic types of symmetries in the plane 6 3 Composition of symmetries 24 4 Proof tasks 27 5 Constructive tasks 32 Appendices 36 Literatura 41 40 References [1] Francová, M., Lvovská, L., Texty k základům elementárni geometrie pro studium učitelství 1. stupně základní školy, skriptum PedF MU, Brno 2014. [2] Francová, M., Matoušková, K., Vaňurová, M. Texty k základům elementární geometrie pro studium učitelství 1. stupně základní školy, skriptum UJEP, Brno 1985. [3] Francová, M., Matoušková, K., Vaňurová, M. Sbírka úloh z elementární geometrie, skriptum MU, Brno 1996. [4] Lomtatidze, L. Historický vývoj pojmu křivka, Scintilla Svazek 3, Brno 2007 [5] Vopěnka, P. Rozpravy s geometrií, Academia, Praha 1989 [6] Struik, D. J. Dějiny matematiky, Praha 1963. (z angl. originálu A concise History of Mathematics, G. Bell and Sons Ltd., London 1956, přeložili Nový, L. - Folta, J.) [7] Katz, V. J. A history of mathematics: an introduction, Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers, Inc., 2. vydání, 1998. [8] Servít, F. Eukleidovy Základy (Elementa). Nákladem Jednoty českých matematiků a fyziků, Praha, 1907. [9] Mičkalová, B. Symetrie v matematice a výtvarném umění, bakalářská práce, PedF MU v Brně, 2017. [10] Němcová, V. Geometrie pro 7. ročník ZS, bakalářská práce, PedF v Českých Budějovicích, 2019. v pracovních listech [11] Citáty na téma geometrie, https://citaty.net/temata/geometrie/. 41