A line segment is the only one-dimensional figure.
A line.
Figures that have no perimeter such as a strairght line or the arc of a circle
Volume is a tree dimensional measurement consisting of length, width, and height multiplied together. A circle is a two dimensional figure. As two dimensional figures have a height of zero their volume will also be zero. l x w x 0 = 0 A circle is a flat object existing entirely in one plane. All planar objects, regardless of shape have zero volume. They can have area, just no volume.
All three dimensional figures have more faces than a one dimensional figure. There are an infinite number of one dimensional points on a three dimensional figure
zero-dimensional examples: Endpoints of edges (vertices and corners) Zero-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes. one-dimensional examples: Edges of figures (sides and arcs) One-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes.
Yes, they do exist.
zero-dimensional examples: Endpoints of edges (vertices and corners) Zero-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes. one-dimensional examples: Edges of figures (sides and arcs) One-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes.
a ray and a line
zero. two dimensional figures do not occupk any space
Figures that have no lines of direction such as space or a vacuum
A zero-dimensional object cannot move along any dimension, so it (and everything else in this dimension) appears as one incredibly tiny speck. A point is zero-dimensional. A one-dimensional object is a step up from a zero-dimensional one, since objects can move in only in one direction, and objects appear along an impossibly narrow line. These include the line, ray, and segment.
a ray and a line
No, they are two-dimensional.
A line segment is the only one-dimensional figure.
A line.
Figures that have no perimeter such as a strairght line or the arc of a circle