The interception of a plane with a cone parallel to the base of the cone is a circle.
A circle.
That conic section is a circle.When you slice a cone with a plane parallel to the base of the cone, the sliced section is a circle, and the portion of the original cone on the side of the vertex is again a cone.An isosceles cone would be the out come
The shape described by the intersection of the cone and the plane is simply a circle.
Yes and it is cone that has part of its top cut off parallel to its base and it looks like a plant pot.
If it's parallel to the base, it's a circle. If it doesn't go through the base, it's an ellipse. If it's does, it's hyperbolic/parabolic.
A circle.
That conic section is a circle.When you slice a cone with a plane parallel to the base of the cone, the sliced section is a circle, and the portion of the original cone on the side of the vertex is again a cone.An isosceles cone would be the out come
This kind of conic section is a circle
This is called an ellipse.
The points where the cone and plane intersect will form a circle.
The "conic section" that is produced when you slice a cone with a plane that passes through only one nappe of the cone but that is not parallel to an edge of the cone is known as an ellipse. In the case where the plane is perpendicular to the axis of the cone, the ellipse becomes a circle.
When a cone is sliced parallel to the base then the shape produced is a circle. If the cone is sliced at an angle so that the cut goes completely through the cone then an ellipse is produced. If the cut is made perpendicular to the cone's base then the shape produced is a parabola.
The general answer is an ellipse.
It is a circle - or at its extreme, a point.
Ellipse. (sources) internet class.
Ellipse. (sources) internet class.
Ellipse. (sources) internet class.