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- [Instructor] What we're going to do in this video
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is demonstrate that angles are congruent if and only
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if they have the same measure,
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and for our definition of congruence,
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we will use the rigid transformation definition,
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which tells us two figures are congruent if and only
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if there exists a series of rigid transformations
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which will map one figure onto the other.
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And then, what are rigid transformations?
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Those are transformations that preserve distance
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between points and angle measures.
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So, let's get to it.
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So, let's start with two angles that are congruent,
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and I'm going to show that they have the same measure.
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I'm going to demonstrate that, so they start congruent,
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so these two angles are congruent to each other.
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Now, this means by the rigid transformation
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definition of congruence, there is a series
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of rigid transformations,
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transformations that map
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angle ABC onto angle,
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I'll do it here, onto angle DEF.
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By definition, by definition of rigid transformations,
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they preserve angle measure, preserve angle measure.
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So, if you're able to map the left angle
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onto the right angle, and in doing so, you did it
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with transformations that preserved angle measure,
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they must now have the same angle measure.
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We now know that the measure of angle ABC is equal
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to the measure of angle DEF.
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So, we've demonstrated this green statement the first way,
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that if things are congruent,
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they will have the same measure.
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Now, let's prove it the other way around.
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So now, let's start with the idea that measure of angle ABC
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is equal to the measure of angle DEF,
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and to demonstrate that these are going to be congruent,
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we just have to show that there's always a series
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of rigid transformations that will map angle ABC
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onto angle DEF, and to help us there,
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let's just visualize these angles,
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so, draw this really fast, angle ABC,
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and angle is defined by two rays that start at a point.
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That point is the vertex, so that's ABC,
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and then let me draw angle DEF.
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So, that might look something like this, DEF,
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and what we will now do is let's do
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our first rigid transformation.
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Let's translate, translate angle ABC
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so that B mapped to point E,
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and if we did that, so we're gonna translate it like that,
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then ABC is going to look something like,
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ABC is gonna look something like this.
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It's going to look something like this.
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B is now mapped onto E.
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This would be where A would get mapped to.
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This would where C would get mapped to.
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Sometimes you might see a notation A prime, C prime,
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and this is where B would get mapped to,
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and then the next thing I would do
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is I would rotate angle ABC about its vertex,
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about B, so that ray BC,
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ray BC, coincides, coincides with ray EF.
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Now, you're just gonna rotate the whole angle that way
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so that now, ray BC coincides with ray EF.
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Well, you might be saying, "Hey, C doesn't necessarily have
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"to sit on F 'cause they might be different distances
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"from their vertices," but that's all right.
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The ray can be defined by any point that sits on that ray,
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so now, if you do this rotation, and ray BC coincides
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with ray EF, now those two rays would be equivalent
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because measure of angle ABC is equal to the measure
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of angle DEF.
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That will also tell us that ray BA, ray BA now coincides,
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coincides with ray ED, and just like that,
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I've given you a series of rigid transformations
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that will always work.
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If you translate so that the vertices are mapped
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onto each other and then you rotate it
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so that the bottom ray of one angle coincides
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with the bottom ray of the other angle,
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then you could say the top ray of the two angles
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will now coincide because the angles have the same measure,
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and because of that, the angles now completely coincide,
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and so we know that angle ABC is congruent to angle DEF,
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and we're now done.
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We've proven both sides of this statement.
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If they're congruent, they have the same measure.
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If they have the same measure, then they are congruent.