Many of us have experience with two dimensional space. We create graphs on 2-D space. Take a sheet of paper, draw an x and a y axis on it, and go to town. This two dimensional space is as real as three dimensional space around (and including) it.
zero. two dimensional figures do not occupk any space
A space can be two-dimensional and infinite if it does not have defined bounds. Mathematically, this usually means no restrictions on the domain or co-domain of the two-dimensional space.
No.
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No, black holes are not two-dimensional structures in space. They are three-dimensional regions of space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from them.
The plane is in two dimensional and the space figure is in three dimensional.
It is an adjectival form referring to a something that exists in two-dimensional space.
Lines are one-dimensional objects but they can be in 2-dimensional - or even 20-dimensional) space.
ZERO Space, because SPAce IS A 3-DIMENSIONAL FEATURE. 2-DIMENSIONAL FEATURES occupy no space , because there is no third dimension.
Two dimensional object is a plane figure where as three dimensional object is solid (space) figure.
There is no such thing as a two-dimensional space. By virtue of being a space, you are talking three dimensions. It sounds like what you're really asking is: What is a two-dimensional AREA bounded by an infinite set of points (or infinite number of sides - same thing)? Typically, that would be a circle...however you didn't specify the points all had to be equidistant from its center so it could be any irregular shape containing at least one curve (any curved portion would automatically have to contain infinite points). The best way to ask the question so that the only answer would be 'a circle' is: What is a two-dimensional area formed by an infinite set of points, all of which are equidistant from its center?
Cubism attempted to find new ways to represent three-dimensional objects in a two-dimensional space.