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  2. In geometry, a point reflection (also called a point inversion or central inversion) is a transformation of affine space in which every point is reflected across a specific fixed point. When dealing with crystal structures and in the physical sciences the terms inversion symmetry , inversion center or centrosymmetric are more commonly used.

  3. A point reflection is just a type of reflection. In standard reflections, we reflect over a line, like the y-axis or the x-axis. For a point reflection, we actually reflect over a specific point, usually that point is the origin . Formula r(origin) (a, b) → (−a, −b) Formula r ( o r i g i n) ( a, b) → ( − a, − b) Example 1.

  4. A reflection is a transformation that acts like a mirror: It swaps all pairs of points that are on exactly opposite sides of the line of reflection. The line of reflection can be defined by an equation or by two points it passes through. Part 1: Reflecting points. Let's study an example of reflecting over a horizontal line.

  5. Transcript. We can plot points after reflecting them across a line, like the x-axis or y-axis. Reflections create mirror images of points, keeping the same distance from the line. When we reflect across the y-axis, the image point is the same height, but has the opposite position from left to right. Questions.

    • 4 min
  6. Just like looking at a mirror image of yourself, but flipped....a reflection point is the mirror point on the opposite side of the axis. Watch this tutorial and reflect :). Created by Sal Khan. Questions. Tips & Thanks. Want to join the conversation? Log in. Sort by: Top Voted. Avanay_07. 4 years ago.

    • 4 min
    • Sal Khan
  7. 5 days ago · Reflection. Consider a point source of light that sends out a spherical wave toward an imaginary flat plane, as in the left diagram below. When the wave reaches this plane, then according to Huygens's principle, we can look at every point on the plane and treat it as a point source for an individual wavelet (center diagram below).

  8. Highlights. Section Learning Objectives. By the end of this section, you will be able to do the following: Explain reflection from mirrors, describe image formation as a consequence of reflection from mirrors, apply ray diagrams to predict and interpret image and object locations, and describe applications of mirrors.

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