3 non-collinear points define one plane.
1, exactly 1 plane will
One.
two of the faces of a cylinder are circles circles have an infinite number of lines of symmetry therefore cylinders have an infinite number of planes of symmetry
No, the two planes intersect at a line, which is an infinite number of points.
1 line cause every plane contains atleast 3 or more noncollinear points
4 planes.
exactly one and only one.
3 non-collinear points define one plane.
The answer depends on the number of point. One point - as the question states - cannot be non-collinear. Any two points are always collinear. But three or more points will define a plane. If four points are non-coplanar, they will define four planes (as in a tetrahedron).
One.exactly one
1, exactly 1 plane will
just one
If the points are collinear, the number of possible planes is infinite. If the points are not collinear, the number of possible planes is ' 1 '.
6*5/2 = 15 planes.
You can have an infinite number of planes passing through three collinear points.
Only one plane can pass through 3 non-collinear points.