Picture included. Coordinate plane with triangle EFG with E at 0 comma 5, F at 1 comma 1, and G at negative 2 comma 1. Point H at 1 comma 1 is on segment GF, and points E and H are connected with a segment. Triangle EFG is dilated by a scale factor of 2 centered at (0, 2) to create triangle E'F'G'. Which statement is true about the dilation? segment EG ≅ segment E prime G prime. The slope of segment EF is the same as the slope of segment E prime H prime. segment H prime F prime will overlap segment HF. segment EH and segment E prime H prime both pass through the center of dilation.
@dude
Its geometry
faxs
Haha Sorry for the late response, had to do something It would be easier to visualize the dilated graph if you could (I am not sure whether you are able to or not) Dilations over points not the origin are harder to track, which would help if seen I used Desmos's template which I modified to fit this question: https://www.desmos.com/calculator/vhedhtxvci Either way, dilations wont cause congruency, the triangles will be similar (Invalidates A) From the graph you should be able to see which fits (:
Thank you so much!
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