Basic Math

Congruent figures review | Tenth Grade

Congruent Figures Review - Tenth Grade Geometry

Introduction to Congruent Figures

Congruent Figures: Two figures that have exactly the same size and shape
Symbol: $\cong$ (is congruent to)
Key Property: All corresponding sides are equal in length AND all corresponding angles are equal in measure
Test: If one figure can be placed exactly on top of another (through rigid motions), they are congruent
Difference from Similar: Similar figures have the same shape but not necessarily the same size
Properties of Congruent Figures:

What is PRESERVED (Equal):
• All corresponding side lengths
• All corresponding angle measures
• Perimeter
• Area
• Shape and size

Transformations that Create Congruent Figures:
• Translation (slide)
• Reflection (flip)
• Rotation (turn)
• Any combination of these (rigid motions)

NOT Congruence Transformation:
• Dilation (changes size, creates similar but not congruent figures)
Three Properties of Congruence:

1. Reflexive Property:
$$\text{Any figure} \cong \text{itself}$$
Example: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle ABC$

2. Symmetric Property:
$$\text{If } A \cong B, \text{ then } B \cong A$$
Example: If $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$, then $\triangle DEF \cong \triangle ABC$

3. Transitive Property:
$$\text{If } A \cong B \text{ and } B \cong C, \text{ then } A \cong C$$
Example: If $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ and $\triangle DEF \cong \triangle GHI$, then $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle GHI$

1. Congruence Statements and Corresponding Parts

Congruence Statement: A statement that declares two figures are congruent
Notation: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$
Order Matters: The order of vertices shows which parts correspond
Corresponding Parts: Parts that match in congruent figures (same position)

Understanding Congruence Statements

How to Read a Congruence Statement:

When we write $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$, it means:

Corresponding Vertices:
• A corresponds to D
• B corresponds to E
• C corresponds to F

Corresponding Sides:
• $\overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}$ (first two vertices)
• $\overline{BC} \cong \overline{EF}$ (second and third vertices)
• $\overline{AC} \cong \overline{DF}$ (first and third vertices)

Corresponding Angles:
• $\angle A \cong \angle D$
• $\angle B \cong \angle E$
• $\angle C \cong \angle F$

Important: The order of letters in the congruence statement tells you which parts correspond!
Example 1: Identify corresponding parts

Given: $\triangle PQR \cong \triangle XYZ$

Corresponding Sides:
• $PQ = XY$
• $QR = YZ$
• $PR = XZ$

Corresponding Angles:
• $\angle P = \angle X$
• $\angle Q = \angle Y$
• $\angle R = \angle Z$
Example 2: Write correct congruence statement

Given: $\triangle ABC$ with sides 3, 4, 5 and $\triangle DEF$ with sides 3, 4, 5
If AB = 3, BC = 4, AC = 5 and DE = 3, EF = 4, DF = 5

Correct statement: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$

This tells us:
• AB corresponds to DE (both = 3)
• BC corresponds to EF (both = 4)
• AC corresponds to DF (both = 5)
Example 3: Wrong order matters!

If $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$, then:

Correct corresponding parts:
$\angle A \cong \angle D$, $\angle B \cong \angle E$, $\angle C \cong \angle F$

INCORRECT to say:
$\angle A \cong \angle E$ (Wrong! A corresponds to D, not E)

The order in the congruence statement determines correspondence!

CPCTC - Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are Congruent

CPCTC: Abbreviation for "Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are Congruent"
Meaning: Once you prove two triangles are congruent, you automatically know ALL corresponding parts are congruent
Use: Used as a reason in proofs after establishing triangle congruence
Applies to: All corresponding sides AND angles
CPCTC Theorem:

$$\text{If } \triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF, \text{ then:}$$

All corresponding sides are congruent:
$$\overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}$$
$$\overline{BC} \cong \overline{EF}$$
$$\overline{AC} \cong \overline{DF}$$

All corresponding angles are congruent:
$$\angle A \cong \angle D$$
$$\angle B \cong \angle E$$
$$\angle C \cong \angle F$$
Using CPCTC in Proofs:

Step 1: First, prove the triangles are congruent using one of the triangle congruence criteria:
• SSS (Side-Side-Side)
• SAS (Side-Angle-Side)
• ASA (Angle-Side-Angle)
• AAS (Angle-Angle-Side)
• HL (Hypotenuse-Leg for right triangles)

Step 2: State "By CPCTC" to conclude that any corresponding parts are congruent

Important: You MUST prove congruence BEFORE using CPCTC

2. Solve Problems Involving Corresponding Parts

Goal: Use congruence to find unknown side lengths, angle measures, or prove statements
Strategy: Identify which parts correspond, then use congruence to establish equality
Common Problems: Finding missing measurements, proving segments or angles equal

Finding Missing Measurements

Steps to Solve Corresponding Parts Problems:

Step 1: Read the congruence statement carefully
Step 2: Identify which parts correspond based on order of vertices
Step 3: Write equations showing corresponding parts are equal
Step 4: Solve for unknown values
Step 5: Check your answer makes sense
Example 1: Find side lengths

Given: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle PQR$
If AB = 5, BC = 7, AC = 9, find PQ, QR, and PR

Solution:
Since $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle PQR$:

AB corresponds to PQ → $PQ = AB = 5$
BC corresponds to QR → $QR = BC = 7$
AC corresponds to PR → $PR = AC = 9$

Answer: PQ = 5, QR = 7, PR = 9
Example 2: Find angle measures

Given: $\triangle DEF \cong \triangle XYZ$
If $\angle D = 40°$, $\angle E = 60°$, $\angle F = 80°$, find angles of $\triangle XYZ$

Solution:
By CPCTC:

$\angle D = \angle X = 40°$
$\angle E = \angle Y = 60°$
$\angle F = \angle Z = 80°$

Answer: $\angle X = 40°$, $\angle Y = 60°$, $\angle Z = 80°$
Example 3: Algebraic problems

Given: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$
AB = 2x + 3, DE = 15. Find x.

Solution:
Since AB corresponds to DE and triangles are congruent:

$AB = DE$
$2x + 3 = 15$
$2x = 12$
$x = 6$

Answer: x = 6
Example 4: Multiple unknowns

Given: $\triangle PQR \cong \triangle STU$
PQ = 3a, ST = 12, QR = 2b + 1, TU = 9
Find a and b

Solution:
PQ corresponds to ST:
$3a = 12$
$a = 4$

QR corresponds to TU:
$2b + 1 = 9$
$2b = 8$
$b = 4$

Answer: a = 4, b = 4
Example 5: Using angle relationships

Given: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$
$\angle A = 3x + 10$, $\angle D = 2x + 30$. Find x and $\angle A$

Solution:
Since $\angle A$ corresponds to $\angle D$:

$\angle A = \angle D$
$3x + 10 = 2x + 30$
$3x - 2x = 30 - 10$
$x = 20$

$\angle A = 3(20) + 10 = 70°$

Answer: x = 20, $\angle A = 70°$

3. Identify Congruent Figures

Identifying Congruent Figures: Determining if two figures have the same size and shape
Methods: Visual inspection, measurement comparison, transformation analysis
Key Question: Can one figure be mapped onto the other using only rigid motions?

Methods to Identify Congruent Figures

Method 1: Measurement Check

For Triangles:
• Check if all three pairs of corresponding sides are equal
• Check if all three pairs of corresponding angles are equal
• If YES to both, triangles are congruent

For Other Polygons:
• Check all corresponding sides
• Check all corresponding angles
• Both must match for congruence

Method 2: Transformation Check

Can you map one figure onto the other using:
• Translation (slide)?
• Reflection (flip)?
• Rotation (turn)?
• Combination of these?

If YES, figures are congruent
If you need dilation (resize), they are NOT congruent (only similar)
Example 1: Identify congruent triangles

Triangle 1: sides 3, 4, 5
Triangle 2: sides 3, 4, 5
Triangle 3: sides 6, 8, 10

Analysis:
• Triangle 1 and Triangle 2: All sides equal → CONGRUENT
• Triangle 1 and Triangle 3: Sides different (even though proportional) → NOT congruent (similar only)

Note: Triangle 3 is similar to triangles 1 and 2, but NOT congruent
Example 2: Using transformations

Figure A is at coordinates (1,2), (3,2), (3,4)
Figure B is at coordinates (5,2), (7,2), (7,4)

Analysis:
Measure sides:
• Both have base = 2 units
• Both have height = 2 units
• Both have hypotenuse = $\sqrt{8}$ units

Transformation: Translate Figure A right 4 units → matches Figure B exactly

Conclusion: Figures ARE congruent (translation maps one to other)
Example 3: NOT congruent

Rectangle 1: 4 × 6
Rectangle 2: 3 × 8

Analysis:
• Both rectangles have same perimeter (20)
• Both rectangles have same area (24)
• BUT dimensions are different

Conclusion: NOT congruent
(Having same perimeter or area doesn't guarantee congruence!)

4. Determine if Two Figures are Congruent: Justify Your Answer

Justification: Providing mathematical reasoning for why figures are or aren't congruent
Requirements: Evidence (measurements, transformations) + logical explanation
Key Skills: Comparing measurements, identifying transformations, writing clear explanations

Triangle Congruence Criteria

Five Ways to Prove Triangles Congruent:

1. SSS (Side-Side-Side):
All three pairs of corresponding sides are equal
$$\overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}, \overline{BC} \cong \overline{EF}, \overline{AC} \cong \overline{DF}$$

2. SAS (Side-Angle-Side):
Two pairs of sides and the included angle are equal
$$\overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}, \angle B \cong \angle E, \overline{BC} \cong \overline{EF}$$

3. ASA (Angle-Side-Angle):
Two pairs of angles and the included side are equal
$$\angle A \cong \angle D, \overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}, \angle B \cong \angle E$$

4. AAS (Angle-Angle-Side):
Two pairs of angles and a non-included side are equal
$$\angle A \cong \angle D, \angle B \cong \angle E, \overline{BC} \cong \overline{EF}$$

5. HL (Hypotenuse-Leg) - Right Triangles Only:
Hypotenuse and one leg of right triangles are equal
$$\overline{AC} \cong \overline{DF}, \overline{AB} \cong \overline{DE}, \angle B = \angle E = 90°$$
What is NOT sufficient for triangle congruence:

AAA (Angle-Angle-Angle): Creates similar triangles, NOT necessarily congruent
SSA (Side-Side-Angle): Ambiguous case - can create two different triangles
Just perimeter or area: Not enough information

These criteria only prove SIMILARITY, not CONGRUENCE!

Writing Justifications

Steps to Write a Complete Justification:

Step 1: State what you're determining
"Determine if $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$"

Step 2: Provide evidence
• List all given information
• Compare measurements
• Identify transformations

Step 3: Apply criteria or theorem
• For triangles: Name the congruence criterion (SSS, SAS, etc.)
• For transformations: Name the transformation(s)

Step 4: State conclusion
"Therefore, $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ by [criterion/method]"
or "Therefore, the figures are NOT congruent because..."

Step 5: Explain why (if not congruent)
If not congruent, explain what's different
Example 1: Justify using SSS

Given: Triangle ABC with sides 5, 7, 9
Triangle DEF with sides 5, 7, 9
Determine if congruent and justify

Justification:
Given information:
• AB = 5, DE = 5
• BC = 7, EF = 7
• AC = 9, DF = 9

All three pairs of corresponding sides are equal.

Conclusion: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ by SSS (Side-Side-Side) criterion.

Therefore, the triangles ARE congruent.
Example 2: Justify using transformation

Given: Square ABCD with vertices at (0,0), (2,0), (2,2), (0,2)
Square EFGH with vertices at (4,1), (6,1), (6,3), (4,3)
Determine if congruent and justify

Justification:
Evidence:
• Both are squares with side length 2
• All sides equal: AB = BC = CD = DA = EF = FG = GH = HE = 2
• All angles are 90°

Transformation:
Square ABCD can be translated right 4 units and up 1 unit to map exactly onto Square EFGH.

Conclusion: Squares ABCD and EFGH ARE congruent because a translation (rigid motion) maps one onto the other perfectly.

Therefore, the figures ARE congruent.
Example 3: Justify NOT congruent

Given: Triangle ABC with angles 30°, 60°, 90° and sides 5, 10, 8.66
Triangle DEF with angles 30°, 60°, 90° and sides 10, 20, 17.32
Determine if congruent and justify

Justification:
Evidence:
• Both triangles have the same angles (30°, 60°, 90°)
• However, the corresponding sides are NOT equal:
  - ABC has sides 5, 10, 8.66
  - DEF has sides 10, 20, 17.32
• Triangle DEF is exactly twice the size of Triangle ABC

Analysis:
While the triangles have the same shape (same angles), they have different sizes. Triangle DEF has been dilated by a scale factor of 2 from Triangle ABC.

Conclusion: Triangles ABC and DEF are NOT congruent. They are SIMILAR (same shape, different size).

Reason: For congruence, corresponding sides must be equal, not just proportional. A dilation is NOT a rigid motion.
Example 4: Justify using SAS

Given: In $\triangle ABC$ and $\triangle DEF$:
AB = 6, DE = 6, BC = 8, EF = 8, $\angle B = 50°$, $\angle E = 50°$
Determine if congruent and justify

Justification:
Evidence:
• Side AB = DE = 6 (corresponding sides equal)
• Angle B = Angle E = 50° (corresponding angles equal)
• Side BC = EF = 8 (corresponding sides equal)

Analysis:
Two pairs of corresponding sides are equal, and the included angle (the angle between those two sides) is also equal.

Conclusion: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ by SAS (Side-Angle-Side) criterion.

Therefore, the triangles ARE congruent.

Triangle Congruence Criteria Summary

CriterionWhat Must Be EqualMinimum Information NeededDiagram Pattern
SSSAll 3 pairs of sides3 sidesAll sides marked equal
SAS2 sides + included angleSide-Angle-SideTwo sides and angle between them
ASA2 angles + included sideAngle-Side-AngleTwo angles and side between them
AAS2 angles + non-included sideAngle-Angle-SideTwo angles and a side not between them
HLHypotenuse + leg (right triangles)Hypotenuse-LegRight angle + hypotenuse + one leg

Congruence vs. Similarity

PropertyCongruent FiguresSimilar Figures
SizeSame sizeCan be different sizes
ShapeSame shapeSame shape
Corresponding SidesEqual lengthsProportional lengths
Corresponding AnglesEqual measuresEqual measures
Symbol$\cong$$\sim$
TransformationsTranslation, reflection, rotationAbove + dilation
ExampleTwo identical trianglesTriangle and its enlargement

Corresponding Parts Quick Reference

If Statement SaysThen Corresponding Parts AreExample
$\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$A↔D, B↔E, C↔FAB = DE, BC = EF, AC = DF
$\triangle PQR \cong \triangle XYZ$P↔X, Q↔Y, R↔Z∠P = ∠X, ∠Q = ∠Y, ∠R = ∠Z
$\triangle ABC \cong \triangle FED$A↔F, B↔E, C↔DAB = FE, BC = ED, AC = FD

Congruence Properties

PropertyStatementExample
ReflexiveAny figure is congruent to itself$\triangle ABC \cong \triangle ABC$
SymmetricIf A ≅ B, then B ≅ AIf $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$, then $\triangle DEF \cong \triangle ABC$
TransitiveIf A ≅ B and B ≅ C, then A ≅ CIf $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ and $\triangle DEF \cong \triangle GHI$, then $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle GHI$

Key Formulas and Theorems

NameStatementUse
CPCTCCorresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are CongruentAfter proving congruence, conclude all parts equal
Congruence DefinitionSame size AND same shapeDetermine if figures are congruent
Rigid MotionTranslation, reflection, rotation preserve congruenceJustify congruence using transformations
Third Angle TheoremIf two angles of triangles are equal, third angles are equalFind missing angle in congruent triangles
Success Tips for Congruent Figures:
✓ Congruent = same size AND same shape (all parts equal)
✓ Order in congruence statement shows which parts correspond
✓ CPCTC: Use ONLY after proving congruence
✓ Triangle congruence: SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, HL (NOT AAA or SSA)
✓ Rigid motions (translation, reflection, rotation) create congruent figures
✓ Dilation creates SIMILAR figures, NOT congruent
✓ To justify: provide evidence + apply criterion + state conclusion
✓ Similar ≠ Congruent: Similar has same shape, congruent has same size too
✓ Check ALL corresponding parts when identifying congruence
✓ Write clear statements: $\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF$ by [criterion]
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