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Does it Look the Same? - Symmetry and Mirror Halves

Grade 5CBSE

Review the key concepts, formulae, and examples before starting your quiz.

🔑Concepts

A line of symmetry is an imaginary line that divides a shape or a pattern into two identical mirror halves. If you fold the shape along this line, the two halves will overlap perfectly. For example, a heart shape has one vertical line of symmetry down the middle, making the left and right sides mirror images.

Mirror reflection occurs when one half of a figure is the exact reflection of the other. You can test this by placing a mirror on the line of symmetry; the reflection in the mirror should complete the shape so it looks exactly like the original. This is common in symmetrical letters like 'A', 'M', and 'U'.

A 12\frac{1}{2} turn (or half-turn) means rotating a shape by 180180^{\circ} around a center point. A shape has half-turn symmetry if it looks exactly the same after being turned upside down. For instance, the number 88 and the letter 'S' look identical after a 12\frac{1}{2} turn.

A 14\frac{1}{4} turn (or quarter-turn) involves rotating a shape by 9090^{\circ}. A square looks exactly the same after a 14\frac{1}{4} turn because all its sides and angles are equal. However, a rectangle only looks the same after a 12\frac{1}{2} turn, not a 14\frac{1}{4} turn.

Shapes can also have 13\frac{1}{3} turn (120120^{\circ}) and 16\frac{1}{6} turn (6060^{\circ}) symmetry. An equilateral triangle, which has three equal sides, looks the same after a 13\frac{1}{3} turn. A regular hexagon or a star with six points will look the same after a 16\frac{1}{6} turn.

Symmetry in the alphabet can be horizontal, vertical, or both. Letters like 'E', 'B', and 'C' have a horizontal line of symmetry (splitting the top and bottom), while letters like 'W', 'Y', and 'V' have a vertical line of symmetry (splitting the left and right). Letters like 'H', 'I', 'O', and 'X' have both vertical and horizontal lines of symmetry.

Patterns and tiles often use symmetry to create repeating designs. In a symmetrical pattern, the unit shape is reflected or rotated repeatedly to fill a space. To check for symmetry in a pattern, look for a central point or line where the design repeats itself in a mirrored fashion.

📐Formulae

Angle of Turn=Fraction of Turn×360\text{Angle of Turn} = \text{Fraction of Turn} \times 360^{\circ}

12 turn=180\frac{1}{2} \text{ turn} = 180^{\circ}

14 turn=90\frac{1}{4} \text{ turn} = 90^{\circ}

13 turn=120\frac{1}{3} \text{ turn} = 120^{\circ}

16 turn=60\frac{1}{6} \text{ turn} = 60^{\circ}

Number of Lines of Symmetry in a Regular Polygon=Number of Sides\text{Number of Lines of Symmetry in a Regular Polygon} = \text{Number of Sides}

💡Examples

Problem 1:

Which of the following letters looks the same after a 12\frac{1}{2} turn: H, L, P, Z?

Solution:

  1. Analyze letter 'H': Turning it 180180^{\circ} results in the same shape.
  2. Analyze letter 'L': Turning it 180180^{\circ} makes it look like an upside-down 'L', which is different.
  3. Analyze letter 'P': Turning it 180180^{\circ} makes it look like a 'd', which is different.
  4. Analyze letter 'Z': Turning it 180180^{\circ} results in the same 'Z' shape. Final Answer: H and Z.

Explanation:

Rotational symmetry of 12\frac{1}{2} turn means the figure must look identical when rotated halfway around a circle (180180^{\circ}).

Problem 2:

How many lines of symmetry does a regular hexagon have?

Solution:

  1. A regular hexagon has 66 equal sides and 66 equal angles.
  2. You can draw lines through the opposite vertices (corners): there are 33 such lines.
  3. You can draw lines through the midpoints of opposite sides: there are 33 such lines.
  4. Total lines = 3+3=63 + 3 = 6.

Explanation:

For any regular polygon (where all sides and angles are equal), the number of lines of symmetry is always equal to the number of its sides (nn).