Points A and B are at (7 ,9 ) and (6 ,2 ), respectively. Point A is rotated counterclockwise about the origin by (3pi)/2 and dilated about point C by a factor of 2 . If point A is now at point B, what are the coordinates of point C?

2 Answers
Apr 29, 2018

The image of A rotated by {3pi}/2 is D(9,-7). We get B=r(D-C)+C and we solve giving C=(12, -16).

Explanation:

I don't get why these come up as recently asked when they're two years old.

{3pi}/2 = 270^circ

The image of rotating A(7,9) by 270^circ around the origin lands in the fourth quadrant, so must be D=(9,-7).

Let's see where a point D ends up after dilation around C by a factor of r. One way to think about it is to translate the dilation point to the origin, scale the translate D using r, and translate back:

D ' = r (D-C) + C = (1-r) C + rD

That is always interesting to me. It's the parametric equation for a line between C (r=0) and D (r = 1). D' is on that line, r times the distance from C than D is. That makes sense given the meaning of dilation.

We have D'=B which gives us an equation to solve for C:

B = (1-r) C + r D

B - rD = (1-r) C

C = {B-rD}/(1-r)

C = ( (6,2) - 2(9,-7) )/(1 - 2) = (12, -16)

Check:

(1 - r) C + r D = (-12,16) + (18,-14)=(6,2)=B quad sqrt

Apr 29, 2018

C=(12,-16)

Explanation:

"under a counterclockwise rotation about the origin of "(3pi)/2

• " a point "(x,y)to(y,-x)

rArrA(7,9)toA'(9,-7)" where A' is the image of A"

rArrvec(CB)=color(red)(2)vec(CA')

rArrulb-ulc=2(ula'-ulc)

rArrulb-ulc=2ula'-2ulc

rArrulc=2ula'-ulb

color(white)(rArrulc)=2((9),(-7))-((6),(2))

color(white)(rArrulc)=((18),(-14))-((6),(2))=((12),(-16))

rArrC=(12,-16)