If the line is not IN the plane ... it just zaps through the plane from some direction ... then it touches the plane in only one point. The intersection is a point.if it is lined up with the plane, then the intersection is a line.
A circle~
Points S and V
Origin
In general no. The intersection of two parallel half-planes A and B is either a half-plane (either A or B, when A and B have similar orientation) or the empty set (when A and B have opposite orientation). When A and B are not parallel, their intersection is a maximal open region bounded by the two lines that define A and B, respectively. In this case, the intersection always exists and it is never a half-plane.
The intersection of a sphere with a plane is a point, or a circle.
If the line is not IN the plane ... it just zaps through the plane from some direction ... then it touches the plane in only one point. The intersection is a point.if it is lined up with the plane, then the intersection is a line.
Section of the plane.
point * * * * * or, nothing (if the line is parallel to the plane).
Section plane is the intersection of a plane cutting through a solid
PQ
A point.
A point.
A point.
Unless the line is a subset of the plane, the intersection is a point.
over 900000000000
the A plane is intersect the plane B It's a line.