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B0 C side B side A C0 Angle-Side-Angle Congruence by basic rigid motions A 0 A geometric realization of a proof in H. Wu’s “Teaching Geometry According to the Common Core Standards” A composition of basic rigid motions maps ABC onto A0B0C0 and proves ASA: B0 But let’s go through it carefully, step by step…. C C0 A B A0 a translation, a rotation, and a reflection. ASA criterion for congruence: If two triangles have two pairs of equal angles and the common side of the angles in one triangle is equal to the corresponding side in the other triangle, then the triangles are congruent. Given two triangles, ABC and A0B0C0. Assume two pairs of equal corresponding angles with the sides between them equal. C A B0 C0 B A0 We want to prove the triangles are congruent. In other words, given ABC and A0B0C0, with A = A0, B = B0, and |AB| = |A0B0|, B0 C side C0 A side B A0 we must find a composition of basic rigid motions that maps ABC exactly onto A0B0C0. Step 1: Bring vertex A to A0 by a translation 𝑇 along the vector from A to A0. B0 C A C0 B A0 𝑇 translates all points in the plane. Original positions are shown with dashed lines and new positions in red. Step 2: Bring sides AB and A0B0 together. Use rotation ℛ around point A0 to bring the translated image of AB by 𝑇 to A0B0. B0 C C0 A B A0 ℛ maps the translated image of AB exactly onto A0B0 because |AB| = |A0B0| and rotations preserve length. Step 3: Bring vertices C and C0 together. B0 C A C0 B A0 We want to get the third vertex C to coincide with C0 so we reflect the image of ABC across A0B0. Can we be sure this reflection takes the image of C exactly to C0 and not to some other place? B0 C C0 A B A0 ? Yes, we can. Basic rigid motions preserve degrees of angles. B0 C C0 A B A0 Therefore the reflected angle CAB = C0A0B0 and the reflected angle CBA = C0B0A0. Therefore the reflected ray BC coincides with ray B0C0 and the reflected ray AC coincides with B0 ray A0C0. C C0 A B A0 The intersection of the reflected rays BC and AC (i.e., the reflected C) coincides with the intersection of ray B0C0 and A0C0 (i.e., C0). So, a composition of basic rigid motions— a translation, a rotation, and a reflection— B0 C C0 A B A0 maps ABC onto A0B0C0 and proves the ASA criterion for congruence.