The image of Q after QRST has been reflected across the y-axis and then rotated 90 degrees about the origin is (-2,9 ), (2,-9) is correct .
The point Q(-9,2) undergoes a reflection across the y-axis, resulting in Q'(9,2).
Subsequently, two possible 90-degree rotations about the origin are considered.
For a counterclockwise rotation, the coordinates become Q'(-2,9), while for a clockwise rotation, the coordinates become Q'(2,-9).
The process of reflection across the y-axis involves negating the x-coordinate, and the rule for this transformation is (x, y) → (-x, y).
Applied to Q(-9,2), it yields Q'(9,2).
For a counterclockwise rotation of 90 degrees, the rule is (x, y) → (-y, x). Applying this to the reflected point Q'(9,2) results in Q'(-2,9).
Alternatively, for a clockwise rotation of 90 degrees, the rule is (x, y) → (y, -x). Applying this rule to the reflected point Q'(9,2) yields Q'(2,-9).
Therefore, after a reflection across the y-axis followed by a 90-degree rotation (either counterclockwise or clockwise) about the origin, the coordinates of the final image point Q' can be either (-2,9) or (2,-9), depending on the direction of rotation.