In ordinary geometry, no. Any ray will have infinitely many points.
A+ ls = ba
No. Line CD is the same as line DC, but rays are always named from the origin point, so ray DC is a ray pointing in the opposite direction from ray CD.
A laser, light from a flashlight, and radio waves are all rays
It is to label two points.Wrong answer! You need to draw a ray first, Here is the official Steps:Step one: Draw a Ray with endpoint CStep two: Use the Compass to measure the length of Point A and BStep three: Use the same compass setting, put the compass point on point C.Then draw an arc that intersects the ray. THEN Label the points of intersection D.
A ray
In ordinary geometry, no. Any ray will have infinitely many points.
Not in plane Euclidean geometry.
A+ ls = ba
A ray has only one point. It goes on and on in one direction only.
its height of the cylinder
Ray C. Jurgensen has written: 'Geometry.' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Geometry, Study and teaching (Secondary) 'Modern school mathematics' 'Resource Book'
You draw a single ray and label it twice: once for the incoming ray and again for the outgoing ray.
It means that you have a ray, and that you (or somebody) attached a label to it.
Ray Endpoint Shape Forever Going
No. Line CD is the same as line DC, but rays are always named from the origin point, so ray DC is a ray pointing in the opposite direction from ray CD.
A laser, light from a flashlight, and radio waves are all rays