Chat with our AI personalities
Yes. If two planes are not coincident (the same plane) and are not parallel, then they intersect in one straight line.
Tow planes can intersect eachother in either exactly one point or along a line. I'm new to this, however this answer is straight from my course litterature.
A section of a cone or spheroid intersected by one or two planes that themselves do not intersect within the solid.A section of a cone or spheroid intersected by one or two planes that themselves do not intersect within the solid.A section of a cone or spheroid intersected by one or two planes that themselves do not intersect within the solid.A section of a cone or spheroid intersected by one or two planes that themselves do not intersect within the solid.
No. The planes must either coincide (they are the same, and intersect everywhere), be parallel (never intersect), or intersect in exactly one line.
Two planes do not intersect at all if the planes are parallel in three-dimensional space.