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Infinitely many planes contain any two given points- it takes three (non-collinear) points to determine a plane.
Yes.No. Any two planes will be contained in infinitely many planes, not "exactly one".
It need not have any.
No. Two planes may be parallel and so may not intersect. Also, any line is the intersection of infinitely many planes, not just two.
just one
Infinitely many planes contain any two given points- it takes three (non-collinear) points to determine a plane.
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There are approximately 5,000 germs on your hand at any given time
At any given time, a human hand may contain as many as 5,000 germs.
You take the total population of the world and deduct how many of them are on the surface of the earth at any given time.
Yes. At any given time there are about 2000 thunderstorms occurring, many of them in the tropics.
Yes.No. Any two planes will be contained in infinitely many planes, not "exactly one".
Since it's a global site - there are probably millions browsing the site at any given time.
There are an infinite number of planes that pass through a pair of points. Select any plane that passes through both the points and then rotate it along the line joining the two points.
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.
It need not have any.
Priority given to who was scheduled first, fuel carrying, size and any emergency factors