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  2. Euclidean planes in three-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_planes_in_three...

    A plane segment or planar region (or simply "plane", in lay use) is a planar surface region; it is analogous to a line segment. A bivector is an oriented plane segment, analogous to directed line segments. [a] A face is a plane segment bounding a solid object. [1] A slab is a region bounded by two parallel planes.

  3. Euclidean geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_geometry

    The angle scale is absolute, and Euclid uses the right angle as his basic unit, so that, for example, a 45-degree angle would be referred to as half of a right angle. The distance scale is relative; one arbitrarily picks a line segment with a certain nonzero length as the unit, and other distances are expressed in relation to it.

  4. Euclidean plane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_plane

    The plane has two dimensions because the length of a rectangle is independent of its width. In the technical language of linear algebra, the plane is two-dimensional because every point in the plane can be described by a linear combination of two independent vectors.

  5. Point–line–plane postulate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointlineplane_postulate

    Every line is a set of points which can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with the real numbers. Any point can correspond with 0 (zero) and any other point can correspond with 1 (one). Dimension assumption. Given a line in a plane, there exists at least one point in the plane that is not on the line. Given a plane in space, there exists ...

  6. Plane (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plane_(mathematics)

    In mathematics, a plane is a two-dimensional space or flat surface that extends indefinitely. A plane is the two-dimensional analogue of a point (zero dimensions), a line (one dimension) and three-dimensional space. When working exclusively in two-dimensional Euclidean space, the definite article is used, so the Euclidean plane refers to the ...

  7. Line–plane intersection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lineplane_intersection

    In analytic geometry, the intersection of a line and a plane in three-dimensional space can be the empty set, a point, or a line. It is the entire line if that line is embedded in the plane, and is the empty set if the line is parallel to the plane but outside it. Otherwise, the line cuts through the plane at a single point.

  8. Euclidean space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_space

    The other is rotation around a fixed point in the plane, in which all points in the plane turn around that fixed point through the same angle. One of the basic tenets of Euclidean geometry is that two figures (usually considered as subsets ) of the plane should be considered equivalent ( congruent ) if one can be transformed into the other by ...

  9. Projective geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_geometry

    (L2) at least dimension 1 if it has at least 2 distinct points (and therefore a line), (L3) at least dimension 2 if it has at least 3 non-collinear points (or two lines, or a line and a point not on the line), (L4) at least dimension 3 if it has at least 4 non-coplanar points. The maximum dimension may also be determined in a similar fashion.