When a movement occurs in two planes, it is called turbulence.
You draw a horizontal line on the x-intercept.
The y-intercept happens when x = 0, so if y = 2x - 5, then the y-intercept happens when y = 0 - 5, or -5.
The two intercept forms in math are used mostly in graphing. They would be both x-intercept (or x-intercepts), and y-intercept (or y-intercepts)
We have no idea what it means, or what it looks like, when two "angles intercept".
No, perpendicular planes intercept at only one point. Parallel planes do not intersect at all.
NO, but they can intercpet in a line which is not the same as a segment of course.
When a movement occurs in two planes, it is called turbulence.
Some planes have only one intercept.
It depends on the y-intercept of WHAT is changed.
You draw a horizontal line on the x-intercept.
The y-intercept happens when x = 0, so if y = 2x - 5, then the y-intercept happens when y = 0 - 5, or -5.
When two lines intercept equal opposite vertical angles are formed and if the lines are perpendicular then right angles are formed
The two intercept forms in math are used mostly in graphing. They would be both x-intercept (or x-intercepts), and y-intercept (or y-intercepts)
as the y-intercept increases, the graph of the line shifts up. as the y-intercept decreases, the graph of the line shifts down.
We have no idea what it means, or what it looks like, when two "angles intercept".
two planes intersect in one line, or the planes could be parallel. by the way there is no such thing as skew planes...