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Plane Geometry Videos 26 videos
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 3, Problem 1. What is the area of the trapezoid shape in the video?
Math Plane Geometry: Drill 1, Problem 1. What does a straight angle measure?
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 1, Problem 2. In the following diagram, what does Angle 2 measure?
Geometric Planes 793 Views
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Description:
Geometric Planes are great and all, but you don't really want to book a flight to Tahiti on one. They're aerodynamic, sure, but good luck finding any leg room.
Transcript
- 00:04
Geometric Planes, a la Shmoop.
- 00:07
It's a bird!
- 00:08
It's a plane!
- 00:09
It's… Shmooperman!
- 00:11
Oh, wait. Our bad. It is a plane.
Full Transcript
- 00:14
A geometric plane.
- 00:16
In geometry, planes are undefined notions, along with points and lines.
- 00:23
It just means that defining them is a bit tricky, but we can still describe them.
- 00:28
Planes have infinite length and infinite width, but no depth at all.
- 00:36
You can think of them as infinitely thin sheets of paper that extend forever in all directions….
- 00:42
…kind of like your mom's collection of wrapping paper around the holidays.
- 00:46
Of course, since we can't draw something that has infinite length and infinite width,
- 00:50
we settle for drawing something like this.
- 00:53
That's plane M.
- 00:55
Just like any two points define a line, any three points can define a plane.
- 01:01
That's the reason tripods don't wobble nearly as much as bipods do.
- 01:05
And that's also why bipods… don't really exist.
- 01:09
So given this figure, which points are NOT on plane M?
- 01:18
If a point is on a plane, we usually draw it within the boundaries of the plane.
- 01:22
These boundaries aren't real, of course, since planes go on forever.
- 01:25
But drawing those boundaries spares our brains from trying to visualize infinity.
- 01:30
The points that are on plane M are H, B, C, D, and F
- 01:35
because they're all contained within the boundaries of M.
- 01:38
That means that the rest of the points… highlighted here for your viewing pleasure...
- 01:42
A, E, and G… are not on plane M.
- 01:46
Which points are both on planes M and N?
- 01:50
As in Mike and Nancy.
- 01:52
For points to be on both planes M and N,
- 01:56
they need to be contained within the boundaries of those planes in the figure.
- 02:02
We can see that points H, B, C, D, and F are on plane M,
- 02:05
and points A, B, C, and D are on plane N, Nancy.
- 02:09
Only points B, C, and D are shared by both those planes. And they're collinear!
- 02:20
Just like two lines intersect at a point, two planes intersect at a line.
- 02:24
Points B, C, and D are on the line that results from the intersection of planes M, Mike, and N, Nancy.
- 02:30
So… while a geometric plane isn’t going to swoop in and catch
- 02:34
you after falling from a 37-story window…
- 02:37
…it’s still pretty… super.
- 02:38
What were you doing that close to the window, anyway?
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