Reflectional
Reflectional describes symmetry with respect to a reflection across a line (in the plane) or a plane (in space). An object is reflectionally symmetric if there exists a line or plane such that reflecting the object across it yields an identical image. The line or plane is called the axis or plane of symmetry. In two dimensions, common examples include letters like A, which has a vertical line of symmetry, and H, which has two; a circle has infinitely many axes of symmetry.
The number of reflection axes depends on the figure’s symmetry. Regular polygons have a finite set of
In three dimensions, reflectional symmetry is defined with respect to a mirror plane. Such symmetry is important
Mathematically, reflections are isometries that preserve distances but reverse orientation. They form part of the symmetry
In common usage, reflectional is often paired with symmetry to denote mirror-like, or mirror-image, symmetry. The