A triangle has corners at #(3, 1 )#, #( 2, 3 )#, and #( 2 , 6 )#. If the triangle is dilated by # 1/5 x# around #(1, 1)#, what will the new coordinates of its corners be? Geometry Transformations Dilations or Scaling around a Point 1 Answer sankarankalyanam Jul 14, 2018 #color(indigo)("New coordinates are " (7/5,1), (6/5,7/5), (6/5,2)# Explanation: #A(3,1), B(2,3), C(2,6), " about point " D (1,1), " dilation factor "1/5# #A'((x),(y)) =(1/5)a - (-4/5)d =(1/5)*((3),(1)) - (-4/5)*((1),(1)) = ((7/5),(1))# #B'((x),(y)) = (1/5)b - (-4/5)d = (1/5)*((2),(3)) - (-4/5)*((1),(1)) = ((6/5),(7/5))# #C'((x),(y)) = (1/5)c - (-4/5)d = (1/5)*((2),(6)) - (-4/5)*((1),(1)) = ((6/5),(2))# #color(indigo)("New coordinates are " (7/5,1), (6/5,7/5), (6/5,2)# Answer link Related questions If the coordinates of a triangle are #(2,2), (2,4)#, and #(5,2)#, what are the new coordinates... What type of dilation is determined by a scale factor of 2/3? Are dilated triangles basically just similar triangles? How do you locate the center of a dilation? What are the coordinates of the image of the point #(–3, 6)# after a dilation with a center of... Is a dilation always an isometry? How do you find scale factor? How can dilations be used in real life? How do dilations relate to similarity? How do you calculate the scale factor of a dilation? See all questions in Dilations or Scaling around a Point Impact of this question 1828 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License