There must be something missing from the question. As it stands, what's the big deal ?
The wall of a room intersects four other planes . . . two walls, the floor, and the ceiling.
Chat with our AI personalities
Think of a cuboid. Then picture the plane formed by one of its sides, intersecting the two planes formed by the top and bottom. Why don't you just google it
two planes intersect in one line, or the planes could be parallel. by the way there is no such thing as skew planes...
tangent
that is impossible. if they aren't parrallel, and they're rays they have to intersect at some point. This is because rays spread at both ends. The above answer is only correct if the rays on drawn on the same plane or if they are drawn on convergent (intersecting) planes, so the correct answer is the two rays must be drawn on separate planes that are not convergent, since all non-parallel lines on the same plane, or on convergent planes, will eventually intersect. If they are drawn in 3 dimensions than you can avoid them intersecting. Perhaps the questions is not specific enough?
Yes, it does. And it makes equal angles with both of them.(We're talking about straight lines, in a plane.)