the A plane is intersect the plane B
It's a line.
coordinate plane
ONLY a line can be formed by the intersection of two planes...and always.
Two parallel lines, a plane and a line in a plane parallel to it.
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
The intersection of a plane with a solid figure is the set of points where the plane cuts through the solid. This intersection can take various forms depending on the orientation and position of the plane relative to the solid; it can be a point, a line, or a two-dimensional shape (such as a circle or polygon). The specific nature of the intersection is determined by the geometry of both the plane and the solid figure involved.
Origin
A coordinate plane.
A line.Unless the two planes are the same, in that case a plane.
a coordinate plane
coordinate plane
If you mean "only one plane can pass through another plane and through a point that is not on the line formed by the intersection of the two planes," the answer is "no." If you rotate the plane about the point, it will still intersect the line unless it is parallel to the line. By rotating the plane, you have created other planes that pass through the unmoved plane and through the point that is not on the line formed by the intersection of the two planes.
ONLY a line can be formed by the intersection of two planes...and always.
Two planes that intersect are simply called a plane to plane intersection. When they intersect, the intersection point is simply called a line.
Two parallel lines, a plane and a line in a plane parallel to it.
Angles are formed by the intersection of two planes.
a point
The intersection of two lines is always a point or the line itself. The intersection of a line with plane also the same as above.