Up
the X axis goes first then the Y axis.
the y-axis is the horizontal axis
The y axis is referred to as the ordinate axis The x axis is called the abcissa
The y- intercept of a line is where the line crosses the y axis. The x- intercept is where the line crosses the x axis.
Up
Y is the response variable and it goes on the vertical axis.
The Y-axis is located on the left side of a four sided graph. It is going in a vertical direction.
motion in the direction of the 3 axes namely x - axis, y - axis and z - axis...
Yes. In fact, you only need three gyros, one with its axis pointing along each coordinate axis, x, y, and z.
Conventionally, the x axis is time and usually the y axis is, respectively, radial speed and radial acceleration. In such examples, the y-variables are measured in one direction from a fixed point (the origin). Motion across that direction is usually ignored.
The side is the WRONG answer. A Y axis is up and down and a X axis is left and right. Easiest way to remember is Y to the sky, X to the side. Also, the Z axis is front to back.
Yes , there is a constant acceleration is the y- axis. and that acceleration is called acceleration due to gravity or Gravity. Gravity attracts every falling body which is on y axis. that's why the gravity is on y axis which is constant
At what point does line represented by the equation 8x + 4y = -4 intersects the y-axis, and at what point in the negative direction of x-axis.
A unit vector in the positive direction of the y-axis.
X - component = 7.3 cos(250) = -2.497 meters (rounded)Y - component = 7.3 sin(250) = -6.86 meters (rounded)It's pointing down and slightly to the left ... like south-southwest.Another 20 degrees and it would be pointing straight down.
It intersects the x-y plane along the y-axis, and is at 45° angle to the x-y plane. If you rotate the axes so that x is horizontal, z is vertical, and y is pointing away from you, it will look like the line y = x in the xy coordinate system. See below z | | | |45°angle |/ y----------------x (y-axis is pointing away from you)