No. An axis normally stretches out in both directions - infinitely. The x and y axis define a plane and the z-axis is normally at right angles to that plane.
A good way to visualise it is to look at a corner of a room. If you face the corner, the convention is that the floor and the wall to the left meet along the x-axis, the floor and the right wall at the y-axis, and the two walls along the z-axis.
For an example, if negative and positive directions on the X and Y axes represent left/right and forward/backward, Z axis represents up/down.
The x axis is horizontal and the y axis is vertical.
False.
in or out
A z-intercept is a point at which a line crosses the z-axis of a Cartesian grid.
For an example, if negative and positive directions on the X and Y axes represent left/right and forward/backward, Z axis represents up/down.
The geometry for SF6 is octahedral, with a central sulfur atom surrounded by 6 equidistant fluorine atoms situated in the following way: One on the positive x-axis, one on the negative x-axis, one on the positive y-axis, one on the negative y-axis, one on the positive z-axis, and one on the negative z-axis.
the z axis is at right angles to both the x and the y axis. All 3 axis pass through the origin.
the axis of neck is z axis so this is a true answer.
z axis
z-axis
The z-axis is perpendicular to the plane of the x and y-axes in 3-dimensional space.
The bit with the negative x-axis goes to the positive x-axis.
The x axis is horizontal and the y axis is vertical.
False.
Generally the x-axis is displayed on a 2-dimensional Cartesian Coordinate system running horizontally (left to right - for negative to positive values of x) In a 3-D graph, the x-axis is usually shown running diagonally from upper right to lower left (for negative to positive values of x) . In a 3-D graph, the y-axis is the one running horizontally and the z-axis is vertical.
in or out