Im pretty sure the answer is “ does “ ! , hope this help :)
draw a perpendicular line from the directrix passing through the focus, this will be the line of symmetry.
The vertex(h, k) will be located on the line half way between the focus and directrix.
The distance from the focus to the vertex is called the focal length, call it a. The then equation is
(x - h)^2 = 4a(y - k)
the equation can be manipulated to
y = 1/4a(x - h)^2 + k
hope it helps
Answer:
SR and RZ
Step-by-step explanation:
A perpendicular bisector is a line segment that passes through the midpoint of a side of a triangle. In other words, If it goes through a side, it should split the segment in half perfectly. Furthermore, it must be perpendicular to the side it passes through (it should form a ninety-degree angle with the side). Given these two rules, one can say that one of the perpendicular bisectors is SR. SR forms a right angle with (and is thus perpendicular to) side AB. Furthermore, AS is congruent to (has the same length as) SB, which means SR cuts AB in half exactly. Another bisector would be RZ (for similar reasoning). Let me know if that doesn't make sense.