Answer:
A 180° rotation of then a dilation by a scale factor of one-third
Explanation:
The coordinates of the vertices of ΔABC are;
A(-9, 3), B(-9, 6), and C(0, 3)
The coordinates of the vertices of ΔA'B'C' are;
A'(3, -1), B'(3, -2), and C'(0, -1)
We note that for a 180° rotation transformation about the origin, we get;
Coordinates of preimage = (x, y)
Coordinates of image after 180° rotation about the origin = (-x, -y)
Therefore, a 180° rotation of ΔABC about the origin, would give ΔA''B''C'' as follows;
A(-9, 3), B(-9, 6), and C(0, 3) = A''(9, -3), B''(9, -6), and C''(0, -3)
The formula for a dilation of a point about the origin is given as follows;
![D_(O, \, k) (x, \, y) = (k\cdot x, \, k\cdot y)](https://img.qammunity.org/2022/formulas/mathematics/high-school/eas25v9huoptbrhz6285kalez4k0u8c30l.png)
Where;
k =The scale factor = 1/3, (one-third) we have;
A dilation of ΔA''B''C'', by a scale factor of 1/3, we get ΔA'B'C' as follows;
![D_{O, \, (1)/(3) } A''(9, \, -3) = A'((1)/(3) * 9, \, (1)/(3) * -3) = A'(3, -1)](https://img.qammunity.org/2022/formulas/mathematics/high-school/z9l685y8p4x9hnhy5sqbxnhuy8ty6ma1nj.png)
![D_{O, \, (1)/(3) } B''(9, \, -6) = B'((1)/(3) * 9, \, (1)/(3) * -6) = A'(3, -2)](https://img.qammunity.org/2022/formulas/mathematics/high-school/4k0c2wl45xe15ym9ytemekeo6fprwb2auc.png)
![D_{O, \, (1)/(3) } C''(0, \, -3) = C'((1)/(3) * 0, \, (1)/(3) * -3) = C'(0, -1)](https://img.qammunity.org/2022/formulas/mathematics/high-school/zn1ikwgo6gh7rkat81j4mc7z0u3ggx7one.png)
The coordinates of the vertices of ΔA'B'C' are A'(3, -1), B'(3, -2), and C'(0, -1), which is the same as the required coordinates of the image;
Therefore, the transformation that can be performed to show that ΔABC and ΔA'B'C' are similar are rotating ΔABC by 180° then a dilating the image derived after rotation by a scale factor of one-third (1/3) we get ΔA'B'C'.