If you mean: y = 2x+2 and y = 3x-1 then it works out as x = 3 and y = 8 meaning that the point of intersection is at (3, 8) on the coordinated plane.
they intersect at point (1,-2)
No, two distinct planes in three-dimensional space cannot intersect at just a single point. They can either be parallel and not intersect at all, or they can intersect along a line. If they intersect, the intersection will always be a line rather than a single point.
No, 2 planes may only intersect at a line, a plane, or not at all. THREE planes may intersect at a point though...
Such a point is a vertex. But what does the question mean?
Turning Point - 2011 The Intersect Fund 3-2 was released on: USA: 7 May 2012
If the 2 lines lie in the same plane, and they are not parallel, then they will intersect at some point. If the 2 lines are skew lines, then they are not in the same plane, and they will not intersect (but they are Not Parallel)
Yes.
They have a starting point, end point, definite length, they connect 2 points, they have a definite slope, they do not always have a y- intersect or x- intersect.
No. Two lines can include the same point only if they intersect.
To determine the type of lines represented by the equations ( y = 2x + 4 ) and ( y = 2x + 5 ), we can observe their slopes. Both equations have the same slope of 2, indicating that they are parallel lines. Since parallel lines never intersect, they will never meet at any point on the graph.
If it is a linear system, then it could have either 1 solution, no solutions, or infinite solutions. To understand this, think of two lines (consider a plane which is just 2 dimensional - this represents 2 variables and 2 equations, but the idea can be extended to more dimensions).If the 2 lines intersect at a point, then that point represents a solution. If the lines are parallel, then they never intersect, and there is no solution. If the equations are such that they are just different ways of describing the same line, then they intersect at every point, so there are infinite solutions. If you have more than 2 lines then maybe some of them will intersect, but this is not a solution for the whole system. If all lines intersect at a single point, then that is the single solution for the whole system.If you have equations that describe something other than a straight line, then it's possible that they may intersect in more than one point.
No, only at one point, perpendicular to the radius