Answer:
E
Step-by-step explanation:
<em>The first quadrant is the top-right one</em>
<em>If a point is in the first quadrant, the x- and y-values of the point are both positive</em>
<em />
Let's go through the one by one.
A) Translating the quadrilateral right 4 units will make the new S to be
, which is not in the first quadrant.
B) Reflection the quadrilateral across
will not change the y-value of any points. So, the new S will stay below the x-axis, and thus will never be in the first quadrant, because it will always have a negative y-value.
C) This one is tricky. We can prove(the proof is just taking cases of which quadrant) that if a point is in the second or fourth quadrant, it's reflection across the line
will always be in the same quadrant it started in(i.e. reflect a point in the second quadrant, you get a point in the second quadrant). We know that P is in the second quadrant, so the new P will also be in the second quadrant. Therefore, the new quadrilateral will not be entirely in the first quadrant.
D) We intuitively(and can prove) that because R is right underneath Q, the new R will be directly to the left of Q, with the same distance as Q to original R. So, the new R will be
using above method. This point is not in the first quadrant.
E) We know intuitively(and can prove) that a reflection across the line
will make the entire quadrilateral in the first and fourth quadrant. However, When we translate up, the new S, the lowest point on the quadrilateral, will be above the x-axis, making all the points in the first quadrant! Therefore, E works.
F) When we reflect across the x-axis, any points in the second quadrant go to the third quadrant. So, the new P will be in the third quadrant. However, when we translate up 13 units, the new P will go to the second quadrant. It will never cross the y-axis, and will always have a negative x-coordinate. Therefore, P will not be in the first quadrant.
Summing up the cases that work, we get that
is the only answer.