Math, asked by sandhyasaravanan2906, 1 month ago

what is the intersection of a plane and a line intersecting it?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
22

Answer:

If a line and a plane intersect one another, the intersection will be a single point, or a line (if the line lies in the plane). If we want to double-check ourselves, we can plug this coordinate point back into the equation of the plane.

Step-by-step explanation:

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Answered by parulsehgal06
0

Answer:

The intersection of a plane and a line is a point.

Step-by-step explanation:

Plane:

  • A plane is a two-dimensional, flat surface that never ends.
  • A plane is a point with zero dimensions, a line with one dimension, and three-dimensional space in two dimensions.
  • A plane may appear as a subspace of a higher-dimensional space, such as the infinitely long wall of a room, or it may exist independently in its own right, such as in the context of two-dimensional Euclidean geometry.

Line:

  • A geometric figure that can travel in both directions is a line. There are indefinitely many points that make up a line. It has no beginning and no end on either side. One dimension is a line.
  • In the notion of analytic geometry, a line in the plane is frequently described as the set of points whose coordinates fulfil a certain linear equation.
  • However in the concept of incidence geometry, a line may be an independent object, distinct from the set of points which lie on it.

        The intersection of a plane and a line is a point.

Know more about Plane and Line:

https://brainly.in/question/4384478?referrer=searchResults    

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