Yes, it is.
The x and y axis are perpendicular lines with numbers going out. In the sense of 0, 1, 2, 3. And doing the same with the negatives, 0, -1, -2, -3.. and so on.
The y-axis has the equation x=0, so every point on the y-axis has an x coordinate of zero.
When a point lies on the y-axis, its x coordinate must be zero.
The x-axis is infinite. Any number can be on the x-axis of the coordinate plane. If you mean what is the y-coordinate, every point on the x-axis has a y coordinate of zero: (x, 0)
Zero is always plotted on the Y and X axis, known as the origin.The Y axis is vertical, like a straight line or pole for better reference, the X axis is horizontal, like the horizon.
The electric potential at the point on the x-axis where the electric field is zero is zero.
A fact that is true for all point on the X axis is Y=0. There is not a single point on the axis where this is not true. Similarly, the one fact that is true for all points on the Y axis is than X=0.
yes, any point " on the y-axis" has its x co-ordinate as zero.
The gradient of the x-axis is zero. This is because the x-axis is a horizontal line, and there is no change in the y-coordinate as the x-coordinate varies. Mathematically, the gradient (or slope) is defined as the change in y divided by the change in x. Since the change in y is zero along the x-axis, the gradient remains zero.
The ordinate of a point refers to its y-coordinate in a Cartesian coordinate system. For any point that lies on the x-axis, the y-coordinate is always zero. Therefore, the ordinate of a point on the x-axis is 0.
Because it is at the point where it crosses the y-axis, which is at value 0.
The x-intercept is the point where the line crosses the x-axis. 'y' is zero at every point on the x-axis. So to find where the line crosses the x-axis, make 'y' zero, and solve the equation for 'x'. -- The y-intercept is the point where the line crosses the y-axis. 'x' is zero at every point on the y-axis. So to find where the line crosses the y-axis, make 'x' zero, and solve the equation for 'y'. This is the central idea that the following answer calls "zero out". =========================================================X and Y intercepts
If it is on the X-axis, the the value of x is zero so it is not negative.