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GBK Geometry

GBK Geometry. Jordan Johnson. Today’s plan. Greeting HW Questions? Take out log / HW Inequality Review Theorems & Proofs: Perpendicular Bisectors Homework / Questions Clean-up. Inequalities. Solve: (2 x + 3) ⁄ 5 ≥ 7 –( x – 4) < 2 –10 x + 3 ≤ 23 Question to think about:

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GBK Geometry

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  1. GBK Geometry Jordan Johnson

  2. Today’s plan • Greeting • HW Questions? • Take out log / HW • Inequality Review • Theorems & Proofs: Perpendicular Bisectors • Homework / Questions • Clean-up

  3. Inequalities • Solve: • (2x + 3)⁄5≥ 7 • –(x – 4) < 2 • –10x + 3 ≤23 • Question to think about: • What’s the smallest number of sides a polygon can have if it has three collinear vertices? • Note: It can’t be degenerate, and it can’t cross itself.

  4. Proof: Ch. 6 Lesson 1 • Theorem 16: • In a plane, two points that are each equidistant from the endpoints of a line segment determine the perpendicular bisector of that line segment. • Given: C and D are each equidistant from A and B. • Prove: AB  DC and DC bisects AB. • Two possibilities: • C or D is on AB • Neither is on AB trivial really easy

  5. Proof of Theorem 16 • Case I: C is on AB. C is equidistant from A and B, soAC = BC, and C is the midpoint of AB by definition.Therefore, CD bisects AB. Since AC = BC, AD = BD, and (by the reflexive property)CD = CD, we have ΔACD ΔBCD by SSS. By congruence, 1 = 2; because 1 and 2 form a linear pair and are equal, they are right angles, and so CD  AB. Since CD bisects AB and CD  AB,CD is the perpendicular bisector of AB, QED. 2 1

  6. Proof: Ch. 6 Lesson 1 • Case II: Neither C nor D is on AB. • Given: C and D are each equidistant from A and B. • Prove: AB  DC and DC bisects AB. • First step: Let E be the intersection of AB and CD.

  7. Converse to Theorem 16 • Theorem: • Every point on the perpendicular bisector of segment AB is equidistant from A and B. • Rewrite as a conditional statement. • One way: • If a point P lies on the perpendicular bisector of AB, P is equidistant from A and B. • Proof: • Given: Point P on the perpendicular bisector of AB. • Prove: PA = PB. • 2 cases: P lies on AB, P doesn’t lie on AB.

  8. Homework • 25 minutes • Study/write proofs • Theorem 16 and its converse • Asg #43 • Read Ch. 6 Lesson 1 for definition of symmetry, too. • Khan Academy • Practice solving inequalities

  9. Clean-up / Reminders • Pick up all trash / items. • Push in chairs (at front and back tables). • See you tomorrow!

  10. Unused slides follow

  11. Defining Reflection Symmetry • Remember reflection symmetry: • A figure has reflection symmetry about a line m iff… …it is its own image when reflected about line m.

  12. Alternate definition • Points A and B are symmetric with respect to line m iff m is the perpendicular bisector of AB.

  13. Alternate definition, cont. • Two figures a and b are symmetric w.r.t. line m iff every point in a is symmetric with some point in b (w.r.t. line m). • (A figure has reflection symmetry w.r.t. line m iff it is symmetric with itself w.r.t line m.) a b

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