Stage 15 · Triangles

15.4  Reflection Symmetry

Fold and match — the axis of symmetry, the mirror image, and the perpendicular bisector hiding inside.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
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Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 15.4.2 Two figures that are reflections

15.4.2 Two figures that are reflections

Symmetry is one figure matching itself. The same flip can also carry one figure onto a different figure. Stand a triangle in front of a mirror line: across the line appears its mirror image. The flip that takes the first onto the second is a reflection across that line, and the line is again called the axis of the reflection.

A reflection is a rigid motion — it never stretches, shrinks, or bends. So a figure and its reflection are congruent (the very idea from 15.3): every side and every angle is preserved. There is just one twist — its orientation is flipped, the way your left hand is a mirror image of your right. Read the labels A B C around the original counterclockwise and you'll find A′ B′ C′ run clockwise.

△ABC and its reflection △A′B′C′ across the vertical axis. The two are congruent — same side lengths, same angles — but flipped: the lettering reverses its turning direction.
Mirror in the plane

On a coordinate grid the y-axis acts as a vertical mirror: the point (3, 2) reflects to (−3, 2) — the height stays, the left–right sign flips. In general, reflecting (a, b) across the y-axis gives (−a, b); across the x-axis it gives (a, −b). We'll use the grid version in 15.4.5.

eastmath.com · 15.4 Reflection Symmetry · 15.4.2 Two figures that are reflections