A rigid motion is any motion that doesn't deform the original shape - it's a motion that preserves the lengths and angles of a shape without stretching, squishing, or bending anything. The best way to think about rigid motions is to imagine holding something solid in your hand, like a smartphone. How can you move it around? You can <em>rotate</em> it around in your hand, changing its orientation; you can move your hand around through space, changing the smartphone's position. While it may not seem like a motion, you can also hold it up to a mirror, <em>reflecting </em>it in some way. These three transformations, rotation, translation (shifting position), and reflection, are the three primary rigid motions.
Answer:
true for sure it \s pretty easy to do but hard to explain
Answer:
Two acute angles
Step-by-step explanation:
The right triangle has one 90 degree angle and two acute angles. Since the sum of the angles of a triangle is always 180 degrees... The two sides of the triangle that are by the right angle are called the legs... and the side opposite of the right angle is called the hypotenuse.
X = 90-22
x = 68
..............
Answer:
1. 441 km in 45 sec have the same speed as Saige's spaceship.
2. 215 km in 25 sec does not have the same speed as Saige's spaceship.
3. 649 km in 110 sec does not have the same speed as Saige's spaceship. Step-by-step explanation:
Saige's spaceship 588/60= 9.8
441/45= 9.8 same
215/25= 8.6 not the same
649/110= 5.9 not the same
Hope this helps!