2/3,0.5/3
That's a sphere whose radius is the constant equal distance.
the set of points whose distance from the center of the circle is less than that of the radius.
That is a sphere.
It is the real number whose length represents the distance from the zero on the line to the point on the line.
hypotenuse, hypotenuse
2/3,0.5/3
They form the sphere whose center is the given point and whose radius is the given distance.
That's a circle. The "fixed point" is the center of the circle, and the constant distance is its radius.
That's a sphere whose radius is the constant equal distance.
Given a straight line (a directrix) and a point (the focus) which is not on that line, a parabola is locus of all points whose distance form the directrix is the same as its distance from the focus.
It will be a straight horizontal line, whose height will be the distance of the depot from the reference point - the point from which distances are measured.It will be a straight horizontal line, whose height will be the distance of the depot from the reference point - the point from which distances are measured.It will be a straight horizontal line, whose height will be the distance of the depot from the reference point - the point from which distances are measured.It will be a straight horizontal line, whose height will be the distance of the depot from the reference point - the point from which distances are measured.
There are infinitely many points. One of these is (10, 0).
the set of points whose distance from the center of the circle is less than that of the radius.
That is a sphere.
right triangle
The set points whose distance from the center of the circle that is less than the radius. A disk.
Any point whose distance from the centre of the circle is smaller than the radius of the circle.