A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes.
The angle between two planes when the planes intersect at a point is the acute angle fixed by the normal vectors of the planes.
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
ONLY a line can be formed by the intersection of two planes...and always.
Two planes intersect (not interscept) at an edge (or a line).
A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes.
A line. Unless the two planes are the same, in that case a plane.
The angle between two planes when the planes intersect at a point is the acute angle fixed by the normal vectors of the planes.
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
mama mo * * * * * An angle is formed when 2 lines meet at a point: the vertex. Two lines which meet in this way always define a plane. Coplanar angle are two or more angles which are all in the same plane. In 3-dimensional space, it is easy to find angles which are not coplanar. For example, in a cuboid room, the angle formed by the lines where the floor meets two adjacent walls, and where the ceiling meets the same two walls are not coplanar: the angles lie in parallel planes. The same first angle and the angle formed where the ceiling meets another pair of walls are neither coplanar nor in parallel planes: they are in skew planes.
A line is the intersection of two planes. The angle between the planes is called the "dihedral angle".
ONLY a line can be formed by the intersection of two planes...and always.
Two planes intersect (not interscept) at an edge (or a line).
A line .
A 90 degree angle is formed at a right angle.
If you mean an angle then an angle is formed by two straight lines meeting at a vertex.
A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes. It does not have a specific degree.