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reminder
Rotations are TURNS!!

A rotation is a transformation that turns a figure about a fixed point called the center of rotation.
• An object and its rotation are the same shape and size, but the figures may be turned in different directions.
• Rotations may be clockwise or counterclockwise.

When working in the coordinate plane:
• assume the center of rotation to be the origin unless told otherwise.
• assume a positive angle of rotation turns the figure counterclockwise, and a negative angle turns the figure clockwise (unless told otherwise).
rotpic
The triangle is rotated. The letters used to label
the triangle have not been rotated.

 

Rotations can be seen, in a variety of situations:
The Earth
Windmills
Pinwheel
The Earth experiences one complete rotation on its axis every 24 hours.
earth
The blades on windmills convert the energy of wind into rotational energy.
windmill
A children's toy that rotates when blown.
pinwheel
Amusement Park Swing
Ferris Wheel
Merry-Go-Round
An amusement park rides, such as the swing, allow you to become the of the rotation.swing
Ferris wheels rotate about a center hub. (Yes, the seats tilt to prevent falling.) ferris
On the merry-go-round, riders become part of the rotation about the center of the ride.
merrygoround

Rotation of 90º:
(x,y) becomes (-y,x)
Rotation of 180º: (x,y) becomes (-x,-y)
Rotation of 270º: (x,y) becomes (y,-x)
Remember:
Clockwise: arrow1
Counterclockwise:
arrow2
Rotations in the coordinate plane are counterclockwise.

When working with rotations, you should be able to recognize angles of certain sizes. Popular angles include 30º (one third of a right angle), 45º (half of a right angle), 90º (a right angle), 180º, 270º and 360º.

You should also understand the directionality of a unit circle (a circle with a radius length of 1 unit). Notice that the degree movement on a unit circle goes in a counterclockwise direction, the same direction as the numbering of the quadrants: I, II, III, IV. Keep this picture in mind when working with rotations on a coordinate grid.

UnitCircle

Rotations in the coordinate plane:
Keep in mind that rotations on a coordinate grid are considered to be counterclockwise, unless otherwise stated.

bullet Rotation 90º:
   rotX1
Starting with ΔABC, draw the rotation of 90º. (It is assumed that the center of the rotation is the origin and that the rotation is counterclockwise.)

To "see" that this is a rotation of 90º, imagine point B attached to the red arrow. The red arrow is then moved 90º (notice the 90º angle formed by the two red arrows). Look at the new position of point B, labeled B'. This same approach can be used for all three vertices.

Rotation of 90º on coordinate axes.
(x, y) → (-y, x)

bullet Rotation 180º:
   rotX2
Starting with ΔABC, draw the rotation of 180º. (It is assumed that the center of the rotation is the origin and that the rotation is counterclockwise.)

As we did in the previous example, imagine point B attached to the red arrow from the center (0,0). The arrow is then moved 180º (which forms a straight line). Notice the new position of B, labeled B'.

Rotation of 180º on coordinate axes.
(x, y) → (-x, -y)
(same as point reflection in origin)


bullet Rotation 270º:
   rotX3
Starting with quadrilateral ABCD, draw the rotation of 270º. (It is assumed that the center of the rotation is the origin and that the rotation is counterclockwise.)

As we did in the previous examples, imagine point A attached to the red arrow from the center (0,0). The arrow is then moved 270º (counterclockwise). Notice the new position of A, labeled A'. Since A was "on" the axis, A' is also on the axis.


Rotation of 270º on coordinate axes.
(x, y) → (y, -x )

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hintgal
If the rotation angles are giving you trouble, imagine a unit circle with a movable "bug" on a radial arm from the origin. Swing the "bug" around and look at the angle created by the move, and the position of the "bug".
gridboardbug
ti84c
For calculator
help with
rotations
click here.

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