Concepts of geometry
Points, Lines & Planes
The most fundamental geometric form is a point. It is represented as a dot with a capital alphabet which is its name. A line is a set of points and it extends in opposite directions up to infinity. It is represented by two points on the line and a double headed arrow or a single alphabet in the lower case. A plane is a two dimensional (flat) surface that extends in all directions up to infinity.
A plane has obviously no size and definitely no shape. However it is represented as a quadrangle and a single capital letter ( figure 1.1))
Figure shows points A, D & Q, line AB, line l and plane P
Some axioms regarding points, lines and planes are given below.
- An infinite number of lines can be drawn through any given point.
- One and only one line can be drawn through two distinct points.
- When two lines intersect they do so at only one point.
Collinear And Coplanar
Three or more points are said to be collinear if a single line contains all of them. Otherwise they are said to be non collinear.
Figure shows two lines l and m . Line l is such that it passes through A, B and C. Hence points A B and C are collinear. In the case of points P, Q and R there can be no single line containing all three of them hence they are called non-linear.
Similarly points and lines which lie in the same plane are called coplanar otherwise they are called non-coplanar.
Orders of magnitude
An order of magnitude is an exponential change of plus-or-minus 1 in the value of a quantity or unit. The term is generally used in conjunction with power-of-10 scientific notation.
In base 10, the most common numeration scheme worldwide, an increase of one order of magnitude is the same as multiplying a quantity by 10. An increase of two orders of magnitude is the equivalent of multiplying by 100, or 102. In general, an increase of n orders of magnitude is the equivalent of multiplying a quantity by 10n. Thus, 2315 is one order of magnitude larger than 231.5, which in turn is is one order of magnitude larger than 23.15.
As values get smaller, a decrease of one order of magnitude is the same as multiplying a quantity by 0.1. A decrease of two orders of magnitude is the equivalent of multiplying by 0.01, or 10-2. In general, a decrease of Subscribe on YouTube