NO, but they can intercpet in a line which is not the same as a segment of course.
Angles are formed between them
Two planes that intersect do that at a line. neither a segment that has two endpoints or a ray that has one endpoint.
No, perpendicular planes intercept at only one point. Parallel planes do not intersect at all.
In 3d space, two planes will always intersect at a line...unless of course they are the same plane (they coincide). Because planes are infinite in both directions, there is no end point (as in a ray or segment). So, your answer is neither, planes intersect at a line.
A line or a ray - depending on whether the planes are finite or infinite.
A segment that is perpendicular to the planes containing the two bases of a three-dimensional figure is known as the height or altitude of the figure. This segment connects the two bases directly, forming a right angle with both planes. In shapes like prisms and cylinders, this height is crucial for calculating volume and understanding the figure's spatial characteristics.
A line segment can be defined as having two endpoints
Some planes have only one intercept.
A line is infinite but a line segment has end points and a midpoint
Then it could be a straight line segment within a quadrant
Altitude
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