yes if it is a square of recatgle
Four non-collinear points can form exactly one plane. This is because a plane is defined by three non-collinear points, and adding a fourth point that is not in the same line as the other three does not create a new plane; rather, it remains within the same plane defined by the initial three points. Therefore, all four points lie in the same unique plane.
No, a line cannot contain four non-coplanar points. By definition, coplanar points are points that lie in the same plane, and any three points determine a plane. Since a line consists of an infinite number of points that are linear, any additional point beyond two points on a line will not be able to create a non-coplanar arrangement with those already on the line. Thus, four points on a line must be coplanar.
There can be any number of points on a plane, or even on a line - and any number of lines on a plane.
A three-dimensional space contains at least four noncoplanar points. An example of this is the vertices of a tetrahedron, which consists of four points that do not lie in the same plane. This arrangement ensures that the points span three dimensions, demonstrating their noncoplanarity. Other examples include points in a cube or the corners of a pyramid.
If they lie in the same plane.
Four non-collinear points can form exactly one plane. This is because a plane is defined by three non-collinear points, and adding a fourth point that is not in the same line as the other three does not create a new plane; rather, it remains within the same plane defined by the initial three points. Therefore, all four points lie in the same unique plane.
exactly nine planes! * * * * * I would have said 4 - corresponding to the four faces of a tetrahedron. Of course, non-collinear does not mean non-coplanar so all four points could be in the same single plane!
No. If the four points are coplanar, they determine only one plane!
There are no planes containing any number of given points. Two points not the same define a line. Three points not in a line define a plane. For four or more points to lie in the same plane, three can be arbitrary but not on the same line, but the fourth (and so on) points must lie in that same plane.
There can be any number of points on a plane, or even on a line - and any number of lines on a plane.
Any 4 points can lie in a plane, 3 points determine a plane and just take the 4th to be say the origin.
points
yes
all of them are collinear they lie in the same plane
If they lie in the same plane.
coplaner points- are points lying on his the same plane,.. solution: plane R contains XY XY contains X and Y...
lie on the same plane and are collinear