How isometries compose II
Mirror (or Factor) Adjustment -- A major idea
The theorems about double lines reflections (and double point reflections)
have more power than might be noticed for the first time. For example, if one
wants to factor a rotation with center A and write it as a double line reflection,
one of the two mirror lines can be taken as any line through A. Then the other
one is determined. This means that if we are given a double reflection such
as this, the lines can be moved so that one of the lines is in an advantageous
position for canceling or other simplification.
Mirror Adjustment: Statements
- If p and q are any lines parallel to m and n so that the distance from p
to q equals the distance from m to n and the direction from p to q is the
same as the direction from m to n, then the translation RqRp
= RnRm.
- If p and q are any other lines through O so that the (signed, or directed)
angle from p to q equals the angle from m to n, then the rotation RqRp
= RnRm.
- If vector AB = vector CD, then the translation HB HA
= HD HC. Unless the points are collinear, this means
that ABDC is a parallelogram.
Mirror Adjustment Consequences
Constructions:
- Given 3 concurrent lines, a, b, c , find the fourth line d whose
reflection Rd = Rc Rb Ra, the
triple reflection.
- Given 3 parallel lines, a, b, c , find the fourth line d whose
reflection Rd = Rc Rb Ra, the
triple reflection.
- Compose two rotations with centers at A and B and angles a
and b.
- Special related cases: compose two translations or a translation and a rotation
Glide reflections and triple reflection in triangle sides
Show that composition of a HT and a line reflection is a glide reflection.
- Mirror adjustment proof
- Proof with triangles – several cases
- Proof with coordinates
Use mirror adjustment to turn any triple line reflection into the composition
of a half turn and a line reflection.
Theorem: Any triple line reflection is a glide reflection.
Construction: Given a triangle ABC, construct the invariant line and
glide vector of the triple line reflection RABRCARBC.
Odds and Evens and orientation
For any isometry T that is the composition of four line reflections, T is also
the composition of two line reflections.
- Thus if T is the composition of n line reflections, for n > 3, then T
is also the composition of n – 2 line reflections.
- Continuing this process of reducing the number of reflections by 2 eventually
shows that T is either the product of 2 or 3 line reflections, depending on
whether T was the product of an even or an odd number of reflections.
An isometry cannot be both the product of an even number and an odd number
of line reflections.
- If Ra Rb Rc
= Rd Re, then Ra Rb
Rc Re Rd
= identity. But the 5 reflections on the left can be reduced to 3, so this
says that a triple reflection = identity. But we know triple reflections
are either line reflections or glide reflections, and neither is the identity,
since most points are not fixed.
Call an isometry Odd (or orientation reversing) if it is the produce
of an odd number of line reflections and an Even (or orientation preserving)
if it is a product of an even number of line reflections.
- The consquences of the results above is that every isometry of the plane
is Odd or Even but cannot be both.
- Every Odd is the composition of 3 line reflections (or one) and thus either
a line reflection or a glide reflection.
- Every Even is the composition of 2 line reflections and thus is either a
translation or a rotation (or the identity).
Theorem: All isometries of the plane are either the
identity, a translation, a rotation, a line reflection, or a glide reflection.
Composition:
- The composition of 2 Odds is Even. For example the product of a line reflection
and a glide reflection is Even, and so is either a translation or a rotation.
(It can't be the identity since the line reflection is not the inverse of
the glide reflection.)
- The composition of 2 Evens is Even. For example, the product of two rotations
is a rotation or a translation.
- A mixed product of an Odd and an Even is Odd. For example, the composition
of a rotation and a line reflection is a line reflection or a glide reflection.