If a translation maps point (3, 2) to (4, 5); or T: (3, 2) (4, 5), then what is the image of the point (0, 0)?

Bro it's been a decade, how's there no answer

Answer please

To find the image of the point (0, 0) under the given translation, you need to apply the same translation rule.

A translation is a transformation that moves every point in a figure the same distance and in the same direction. In this case, the point (3, 2) is mapped to (4, 5) in the translation T.

To find the vector that represents the translation, you can subtract the coordinates of the original point from the coordinates of its image. In this case, the vector representing the translation is (4 - 3, 5 - 2) = (1, 3).

Now, to find the image of (0, 0), you need to add the vector (1, 3) to the coordinates of (0, 0): (0 + 1, 0 + 3) = (1, 3).

Therefore, the image of the point (0, 0) under the given translation is (1, 3).

(1,3)

For a translation from

(3, 2) to (4, 5), or
(3, 2) to (3+1, 2+3)
we can work out the transformation as:
T : (x,y) -> (x+1, y+3)

Use T to make other transformations.