To find the points that are three units to the left of the Y-axis and five units from the origin, we start by noting that moving three units to the left of the Y-axis places us at the X-coordinate of -3. Since we want the distance from the origin to be five units, we can use the distance formula: ( \sqrt{(-3)^2 + y^2} = 5 ). Solving this gives ( y^2 = 16 ), resulting in ( y = 4 ) or ( y = -4 ). Thus, the two points are (-3, 4) and (-3, -4).
5 units, x axis
The coordinates of a point two units to the right of the y-axis and three units above the x-axis would be (2,3).
(3,0)
It would be a straight line without any ends, going from lower left to upper right at 45 degrees. It would cross the y-axis 3 units below the origin, and it would cross the x-axis 3 units to the right of the origin. You can use those two points to draw the line, and then keep going because the graph of the equation has no ends.
When you graph lines or points, the cross drawn behind them, labeled with numbers and units, are the axes. The horizontal line is the x-axis, and the vertical the y-axis.
On a horizontal straight line, three units below the x axis. On a horizontal straight line, three units below the x axis. On a horizontal straight line, three units below the x axis. On a horizontal straight line, three units below the x axis.
(0,0) = the origin
5 units, x axis
The coordinates of a point two units to the right of the y-axis and three units above the x-axis would be (2,3).
It is at point of origin which is at (0, 0)
(3,0)
A graph has two axes - the x-axis and the y-axis. The x-axis measures how many units a point is to the left or right of the origin (0,0). The y-axis measures the number of units up or down.
To plot the points (1, 2), (2, 1), and (-2, 5) on a graph, you would start by drawing a horizontal x-axis and a vertical y-axis to create a coordinate plane. The x-axis represents the values of the first coordinate in each pair, and the y-axis represents the values of the second coordinate. To plot the point (1, 2), you would start at the origin (0, 0) and move 1 unit to the right along the x-axis and 2 units up along the y-axis. The point (2, 1) would be located 2 units to the right and 1 unit up from the origin, and the point (-2, 5) would be located 2 units to the left and 5 units up.
It would be a straight line without any ends, going from lower left to upper right at 45 degrees. It would cross the y-axis 3 units below the origin, and it would cross the x-axis 3 units to the right of the origin. You can use those two points to draw the line, and then keep going because the graph of the equation has no ends.
When you graph lines or points, the cross drawn behind them, labeled with numbers and units, are the axes. The horizontal line is the x-axis, and the vertical the y-axis.
On the Cartesian plane the principle axes are the x horizontal axis and the vertical y axis whereas both axes cross each other at the point of origin which is at (0, 0) ---------- In an ellipse the major axis is the line that includes the most distant points on the ellipse; the minor axis includes the closest points. An ellipse is a two-dimensional object which can be generalised to three or more dimensions known as ellipsoids. The line that includes the most distant points on an ellipsoid is called the principle axis of that ellipsoid. Please see the link.
Their x co-ordinate is -3.