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Reflecting points across horizontal and vertical lines

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    - [Instructor] We're asked
    to plot the image of point A
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    under a reflection across the line l.
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    So we have our line l here,
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    and so we wanna plot the image of here,
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    we wanna plot the image of point A
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    under a reflection across line l.
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    Well, one way to think about it is point A
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    is exactly one, two, three,
    four units to the right of l.
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    And so its reflection is going to be
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    four units to the left of l.
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    So if we go one, two, three, four,
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    that would be the image of point A.
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    We could maybe denote that as A prime.
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    So if you're doing this on
    the Khan Academy exercise,
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    you would actually just click
    on a point right over there,
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    and it would show up.
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    But this would be the reflection
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    of point A across the line l.
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    Let's do another example.
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    So here we're asked plot
    the image of point B
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    under a reflection across the x-axis.
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    Alright, so this is point B,
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    and we're going to reflect it
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    across the x-axis right over here.
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    So to go from B to the x-axis,
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    it's exactly five units below the x-axis.
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    One, two, three, four, five.
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    So if we were to reflect
    across the x-axis,
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    essentially create its mirror image,
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    it's going to be five
    units above the x-axis.
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    One, two, three, four, five.
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    So that's where the image would be.
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    Maybe we could denote that with a B prime.
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    We are reflecting across the x-axis.
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    Let's do another example.
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    So here they tell us point
    C prime is the image of C,
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    which is at the coordinates negative four
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    comma negative two, under a
    reflection across the y-axis.
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    What are the coordinates of C prime?
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    So pause this video
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    and see if you can figure
    it out on your own.
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    So there's several ways to approach it.
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    It doesn't hurt to do
    a quick visual diagram.
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    So that could be my x-axis.
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    This would be my y-axis.
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    And it's the point negative
    four comma negative two,
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    so that might look like this.
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    Negative four, negative two.
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    So this is the point C right over here.
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    And we wanna reflect across the y-axis.
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    So we wanna reflect across the y-axis,
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    which I am coloring it
    in red right over here.
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    So let's see.
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    The point C is four to
    the left of the y-axis.
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    So its reflection is going to be
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    four to the right of the y-axis.
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    So let me do it like this.
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    So instead of being four to the left,
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    we wanna go four to the
    right, so plus four.
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    So where would that put our C prime?
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    So our C prime would be right over there.
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    And what would its coordinates be?
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    Well, it would have the same y-coordinate,
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    so C prime would have a
    y-coordinate of negative two.
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    But what would its x-coordinate be?
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    Well, instead of it being negative four,
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    it gets flipped over the y-axis,
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    so now it's gonna have a
    x-coordinate of positive four.
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    So the coordinates here would
    be four comma negative two.
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    Four comma negative two.
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    You might've been able
    to do this in your head.
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    Although, for me, even if
    I try to do it in my head,
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    I would still have this
    visualization going on in my head.
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    Negative four comma negative two.
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    I'm sitting there in the third quadrant.
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    If I'm flipping over the y-axis,
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    my y-coordinate wouldn't change,
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    but my x-coordinate
    would become the opposite
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    and I would end up in the fourth quadrant,
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    and that's exactly what happened.
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    Y-coordinate did not change,
    but then my x-coordinate,
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    since I'm flipping over the y-axis,
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    it became the negative of this,
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    so the opposite of negative
    four which is positive four.
Title:
Reflecting points across horizontal and vertical lines
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
03:45

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