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.
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
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.
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
A line or a ray - depending on whether the planes are finite or infinite.