line
A line.Unless the two planes are the same, in that case a plane.
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.
In three-dimensional space, two planes can either:* not intersect at all, * intersect in a line, * or they can be the same plane; in this case, the intersection is an entire plane.
The point of intersection.
Two planes intersect at a line
crash
A line. When two planes intersect, their intersection is a line.
The intersection of two planes in three-dimensional space is typically a line, provided the planes are not parallel. If the planes are parallel, they do not intersect at all. If the two planes are coincident, they overlap completely, resulting in an infinite number of intersection points. The line of intersection can be found by solving the equations of the two planes simultaneously.
If there are two unique, non-parallel planes in space, they will intersect, and their intersection will be a line.
ONLY a line can be formed by the intersection of two planes...and always.
A straight line, and nothing else.
The intersection of two distinct planes is a line. The set of common points in the line lies in both planes.
The intersection of two planes is a line.
It is a line.
yes
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
The intersection of two planes is never a point. It's usually a line. But if the planes have identical characteristics, then their intersection is a plane. And if the planes are parallel, then there's no intersection.