CK12 - Geometry

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

  • If a figurehas pointsymmetryit has rotationalsymmetry.

  • The converseis not true. If a figurehas rotationalsymmetryit may, or may not, havepointsymmetry.


Manyflowershavepetalsthat are arrangedin pointsymmetry. (Keepin mindthat someflowershave
petals.Theydonothavepointsymmetry. See the next example.)


Hereis a figurethat has rotationalsymmetrybut not pointsymmetry.


Planesof Symmetry


Three-dimensional(3-D)figuresalso havesymmetry. Theycan haveline or pointsymmetry, just as two-
dimensionalfigurescan.


A 3-D figurecan also haveone or moreplanesof symmetry.


Aplaneof symmetrydividesa 3-D figureinto two partsthat are reflectionsof eachotherin the plane.


The planecuts throughthe cylinderexactlyhalfwayup the cylinder. It is a planeof symmetryfor the cylinder.


Noticethat this cylinderhas manymoreplanesof symmetry. Everyplanethat is perpendicularto the top
baseof the cylinderand containsthe centerof the baseis a planeof symmetry.


The planein the diagramaboveis theonlyplaneof symmetryof the cylinder, that is parallelto the base.


Example 1


How manyplanesof symmetrydoesthe rectangularprismbelowhave?

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