
Name: TP: ______ Failure to show work on all problems or use
... 6 west and 14 North. If West was represented by positive movement along the x-axis, and North was represented by positive movement along the y-axis, What would be the midpoint between your original and final location? ...
... 6 west and 14 North. If West was represented by positive movement along the x-axis, and North was represented by positive movement along the y-axis, What would be the midpoint between your original and final location? ...
Summary of lesson - TI Education
... Answer: Students may or may not have been successful with angles 1 and 2. However, no student should have been successful using ∠ 3. It is possible to form triangles with the two smaller angles attached to the longest side, if the relationship between the sides and angles is in the right order. (See ...
... Answer: Students may or may not have been successful with angles 1 and 2. However, no student should have been successful using ∠ 3. It is possible to form triangles with the two smaller angles attached to the longest side, if the relationship between the sides and angles is in the right order. (See ...
Geometry Curriculum Map (including Honors) 2014
... as functions that take points in the plane as inputs and give other points as outputs. Compare transformations that preserve distance and angle to those that do not (e.g., translation versus horizontal stretch). G.CO.1.4. Develop definitions of rotations, reflections, and translations in terms of an ...
... as functions that take points in the plane as inputs and give other points as outputs. Compare transformations that preserve distance and angle to those that do not (e.g., translation versus horizontal stretch). G.CO.1.4. Develop definitions of rotations, reflections, and translations in terms of an ...
SAS
... 1. Take the 1st Given and MARK it on the picture 2. WRITE this Given in the PROOF & its reason 3. If the Given is NOT a ≅ statement, write the ≅ stmt to match the marks Continue until there are no more GIVEN 4. Do you have 3 ≅ statements? If not, look for BUILT-IN parts 5. Do you have ≅ triangles? I ...
... 1. Take the 1st Given and MARK it on the picture 2. WRITE this Given in the PROOF & its reason 3. If the Given is NOT a ≅ statement, write the ≅ stmt to match the marks Continue until there are no more GIVEN 4. Do you have 3 ≅ statements? If not, look for BUILT-IN parts 5. Do you have ≅ triangles? I ...
Euler angles
The Euler angles are three angles introduced by Leonhard Euler to describe the orientation of a rigid body. To describe such an orientation in 3-dimensional Euclidean space three parameters are required. They can be given in several ways, Euler angles being one of them; see charts on SO(3) for others. Euler angles are also used to describe the orientation of a frame of reference (typically, a coordinate system or basis) relative to another. They are typically denoted as α, β, γ, or φ, θ, ψ.Euler angles represent a sequence of three elemental rotations, i.e. rotations about the axes of a coordinate system. For instance, a first rotation about z by an angle α, a second rotation about x by an angle β, and a last rotation again about z, by an angle γ. These rotations start from a known standard orientation. In physics, this standard initial orientation is typically represented by a motionless (fixed, global, or world) coordinate system; in linear algebra, by a standard basis.Any orientation can be achieved by composing three elemental rotations. The elemental rotations can either occur about the axes of the fixed coordinate system (extrinsic rotations) or about the axes of a rotating coordinate system, which is initially aligned with the fixed one, and modifies its orientation after each elemental rotation (intrinsic rotations). The rotating coordinate system may be imagined to be rigidly attached to a rigid body. In this case, it is sometimes called a local coordinate system. Without considering the possibility of using two different conventions for the definition of the rotation axes (intrinsic or extrinsic), there exist twelve possible sequences of rotation axes, divided in two groups: Proper Euler angles (z-x-z, x-y-x, y-z-y, z-y-z, x-z-x, y-x-y) Tait–Bryan angles (x-y-z, y-z-x, z-x-y, x-z-y, z-y-x, y-x-z). Tait–Bryan angles are also called Cardan angles; nautical angles; heading, elevation, and bank; or yaw, pitch, and roll. Sometimes, both kinds of sequences are called ""Euler angles"". In that case, the sequences of the first group are called proper or classic Euler angles.