That's a sphere whose radius is the constant equal distance.
The perpendicular bisector of the straight line joining the two points.
Another circle midway between the originals.
the set of points equidistant from a fixed point
No. A line is the locus of all points located between any two points.
A locus of points is just the set of points satisfying a given condition. The locus of points equidistant from a point is a circle, since a circle is just a set of points which are all the same distance away from the center
A Circle.
This is the center, or locus, of a set of points, such as a curve or circle.
A circle is the locus of all points equidistant from a given point, which is the center of the circle, and a circle can be drawn with a compass. (The phrase "locus of points for a circle" does not seem to be conventionally defined.) or true
The locus point is the perpendicular bisector of AB. The locus point is the perpendicular bisector of AB.
The locus of a moving point so that it is equidistant from another fixed point (i.e. the distance between them is always constant) is a circle.
You can define a circle as the locus (set) of all points equidistant from a given point.
A circle, rotated about any diameter, will generate a sphere with the same radius. A circle is the locus of all points in 2-dimensional space that are equidistant from a fixed point. A sphere is the locus of all points in 3-dimensional space that are equidistant from a fixed point.
Every point equidistant from (4, 1) and (10, 1) lies on the line [ x = 7 ],and that's the equation.
a straight line ..
That's a sphere whose radius is the constant equal distance.
The locus of points equidistant from lines y = 0 and x = 3 is the line y = -x + 3.