Rotation preserves side lengths and angle measures
As shown, equilateral triangle is rotated clockwise about point to make equilateral triangle . Find the measure of angle ① (marked ).
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Understand
An equilateral triangle ABC is rotated 90 degrees clockwise about point A to make equilateral triangle ADE (B maps to D, C maps to E). Angle 1 is the angle at A between side AB and side AE. I must find its measure.
- Triangle ABC is equilateral, so each of its angles is 60 degrees
- It is rotated 90 degrees clockwise about A, so the rotation angle is 90 degrees
- The rotation sends B to D and C to E, making equilateral triangle ADE
- Angle 1 is the angle at A between AB and AE
- The measure of angle 1 (angle BAE)
- A rotation keeps all side lengths and angle sizes unchanged
- Each angle of an equilateral triangle is 60 degrees
- The rotation turned AB to AD through exactly 90 degrees
Plan
#17 Visualize Spatial Relationships · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
Rotation is a spatial action, so I picture how AB swings to AD by 90 degrees and where AE lands. Then I split the 90-degree turn into the part covered by the equilateral triangle's 60-degree angle and the leftover, which is angle 1.
Execute
Review
Angle 1 = 30 degrees is acute and smaller than both the 90-degree rotation and the 60-degree triangle angle, which fits because it is the small leftover sliver between AE and AB. The arithmetic 90 - 60 = 30 is exact, so it checks out.
Draw the two triangles to scale on paper (tool 1), actually rotate a cutout of ABC by 90 degrees about A, and measure angle 1 with a protractor to confirm 30 degrees.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.5Recognize angles as geometric shapes formed when two rays share an endpoint — Treating the 90-degree turn as the angle between ray AB and its rotated image ray AD.4.G.A.2Classify two-dimensional figures based on presence of parallel or perpendicular lines — Using the equilateral triangle's 60-degree angle, preserved under rotation.4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Subtracting the 60-degree angle from the 90-degree rotation to find angle 1.