Special Features as Identification Clues for Isometries

The isometries of the plane are of five separate types:  the identity, translations, rotations, line reflections or glide reflections.  To make the types separate, we do not include the identity transformation among the translations or rotations and do not include line reflections as glide reflections. Halfturns, or point reflections, are included among the rotations, but they have some special properties.

These types are in turn divided into two categories -- Orientation Preserving (identity, translations, rotations) and Orientation Reversing (line reflections, glide reflections).

Each type of isometry has distinguishing features.  One important feature of an isometry is whether it has any fixed points or invariant lines.  Such features tell a lot about the isometry.  For example, if T is an isometry and A is a fixed point of T (i.e., T(A) = A), then for any other point B, |T(B)A| = |T(B)T(A)| since A is a fixed point, and this = |BA|, since T is an isometry.  In other words T(B) is on the circle through B with center A and triangle ABT(B) is isosceles.

A line k is an invariant line of T if T(k) = k.  This means that the points of k can move to other points of k but that T does not move the line as a whole to a different line. If all the points of k are fixed, then this is called a line of fixed points; it is invariant, also, but more more.

Type

Fixed Points

Invariant Lines

Lines parallel to their images.

Identity

All points

All lines (all lines are lines of fixed points)

None

Translation by vector AB

None

Any line parallel to AB.

All lines except those parallel to AB

Rotation with center C that is not a Halfturn

One point, the center C

None

None

Halfturn with center C (special kind of rotation by 180 degrees)

One point, the center C

All lines through C

All lines except those through C

Line Reflection in line m

All points on m

All lines perpendicular to m.  Also m is a line of fixed points.

Lines parallel to m

Glide Reflection with invariant line AB and glide vector AB

None

Line AB

Lines parallel to line AB.

In this next table, this information is organized a different way. The special feature is listed in the first column.  Then in columns two and three are given the orientation-preserving isometries and orientation reversing isometries that have this property.  This organization is useful for deducing the type of an isometry from some geometrical information.

Special Features

Orientation Preserving

Orientation Reversing

No fixed points

Translations

Glide Reflections

Exactly one fixed point

Rotations

None

Two or more fixed points

Identity

Line Reflection

Three non-collinear fixed points

Identity

None

No invariant lines

Rotations except for Halfturns

None

Exactly one invariant line

None

Glide Reflections

Two or more invariant lines

Translations, Halfturns, Identity

Line Reflections

Every line is the same as, or parallel to its image

Translations, Halfturns, Identity

None