It is a perpendicular line that forms a right angle at the point of intersection.
The point of concurrency is the point intersection.
angle
Incenter
It is the incentre.
[-sqrt(2), -sqrt(2)]
The three angle bisectors in a triangle always intersect in one point, and this intersection point always lies in the interior of the triangle. The intersection of the three angle bisectors forms the center of the circle in- scribed in the triangle. (The circle which is tangent to all three sides.) The angle bisectors meet at the incenter which has trilinear coordinates.
A point has coordinates; an angle does not.
It is a perpendicular line that forms a right angle at the point of intersection.
The coordinates of a point are in reference to the origin, the point with coordinates (0,0). The existence (or otherwise) of an angle are irrelevant.
A parallelogram does not intersect coordinates!
The coordinates of the point of intersection must satisfy the equations of both lines. So these coordinates represent the simultaneous solution to the two equations that that represent the lines.
I'm not sure exactly what this question is asking, but I will attempt to answer. An angle on the unit circle is created by drawing a straight line from the origin to a point on the circle. The x-coordinate of a point corresponds to the cosine of the angle. For example: cos(90o) = 0 The y-coordinate of a point corresponds to the sine of the angle. For example: sin(270o) = -1
The intersection of a sphere with a plane is a point, or a circle.
The point of concurrency is the point intersection.
Intersection...?
vertex