๐ฌ Symmetry Lab
Flip, rotate, and transform your way to discovering group theory โ the hidden mathematics of symmetry
๐งญ What You’ll Discover
A triangle has exactly 6 symmetries โ 3 rotations and 3 flips. When you combine any two of them, you always get one of the 6 back. This closed system of transformations is called a group, and it’s the same kind of structure you explored with colored circles in Algebra Wizard. Here, you’ll see it come alive through physical movement!
Interactive Tools
๐บ
Triangle Symmetry Explorer
Watch vertices move as you apply rotations and flips. Discover identity, inverses, closure, and โ most importantly โ that order matters!
Interactive
Start Here
๐งฎ
Dโ Cayley Table Builder
Build the complete 6ร6 multiplication table for triangle symmetries. Compose transformations and discover subgroups hiding inside!
Interactive
Use After Explorer
Suggested Path
Step 1: ๐บ Open the Triangle Symmetry Explorer. Try all 6 transformations. Then test whether order matters by applying two moves, resetting, and applying them in reverse.
Step 2: ๐งฎ Open the Dโ Cayley Table Builder. Use the composition calculator to figure out what each pair of transformations produces, and fill in all 36 cells. Can you spot the rotation subgroup?
Step 3: ๐ Compare this Cayley table to the ones from Algebra Wizard. What’s the same? What’s different? Hint: the rotation subgroup is isomorphic to something you’ve already seen…
๐ Connection to Algebra Wizard
In Algebra Wizard, every color operation was commutative โ order never mattered. Triangle symmetries are your first example where order does matter. Rotate then flip gives a different result than flip then rotate! But both systems share the same deep properties: identity, inverses, closure, and associativity. That’s the power of structure.
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