Two planes intersect (not interscept) at an edge (or a line).
A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes.
parallel planes
Yes. If two planes are not coincident (the same plane) and are not parallel, then they intersect in one straight line.
The angle between two planes when the planes intersect at a point is the acute angle fixed by the normal vectors of the planes.
Two planes intersect (not interscept) at an edge (or a line).
Planes.
The geometric figure formed when two planes intersect is called a polygon.* * * * *Wrong!The correct answer is a straight line.
Two planes intersect at a line
A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes.
A line. When two planes intersect, their intersection is a line.
No, two planes do not intersect in exactly one plane unless the planes are exactly overlapping, making one plane. In Euclidean Geometry two planes intersect in exactly one line.
In geometry, two planes intersect in a line. The only time this is not true is if the two planes are parallel to each other.
parallel planes
Two distinct planes will intersect in one straight line.
Yes. If two planes are not coincident (the same plane) and are not parallel, then they intersect in one straight line.
The angle between two planes when the planes intersect at a point is the acute angle fixed by the normal vectors of the planes.