Chapter 8: Three Dimensional Geometry (Set-3)

Which ordered triple represents the point that is 4 units on x-axis only

A (0,4,0)
B (0,0,4)
C (4,0,0)
D (4,4,0)

The point (3,−2,5) lies in which octant sign pattern

A (−,+,+)
B (+,−,+)
C (+,+,−)
D (−,−,+)

If direction ratios are (1,2,2), the corresponding direction cosines are

A (1/3,2/3,2/3)
B (1/√6,2/√6,2/√6)
C (1/√5,2/√5,2/√5)
D (1/2,1/2,1/2)

A line makes equal angles with y- and z-axes when

A l = m
B l = n
C m = n
D l+m+n=1

Distance between points (1,2,3) and (4,2,7) equals

A √41 units
B 5 units
C √34 units
D 6 units

A point divides segment joining A and B externally when the ratio is

A m:n with same signs
B m=n always
C ratio must be 1:1
D m:n with opposite signs

For plane 2x−3y+6z+5=0, a normal vector is

A (5,2,−3)
B (2,3,6)
C (2,−3,6)
D (−2,−3,−6)

The angle between planes depends mainly on

A their normal vectors
B their d values
C their intercepts only
D their areas only

If a line’s direction vector is (a,b,c), then a perpendicular plane must have normal

A perpendicular to (a,b,c)
B parallel to (a,b,c)
C zero normal vector
D (a²,b²,c²)

Line through (1,1,1) with direction ratios (2,−1,3) in parametric form is

A x=1−2t,y=1−t,z=1−3t
B x=2+t,y=−1+t,z=3+t
C x=1+2t,y=1−t,z=1+3t
D x=1+2t,y=1+t,z=1+3t

A line intersects plane ax+by+cz+d=0 at one point when it is

A parallel not lying
B lying completely
C parallel to normal
D not parallel plane

Condition for a point P(x1,y1,z1) to lie on plane x+2y−z=4 is

A x1−2y1+z1=4
B x1+2y1−z1=4
C x1+2y1+z1=4
D x1y1z1=4

The line of intersection of two planes is generally

A a point only
B a plane itself
C a line
D a sphere

If two lines have direction ratios (1,0,1) and (0,1,0), then their dot product is

A 1
B 0
C 2
D −1

If direction cosines are (l,m,n) and l=m=0, then n must be

A ±1 only
B 0 only
C 1/2 only
D any real number

Distance from point (1,2,3) to plane x−2y+2z=5 equals

A |1−4+6−5|/3
B |1−4+6−5|/√9
C |1−4+6−5|/√(1+4+4)
D |1−4+6−5|/√(1+2+2)

A plane parallel to x-axis and y-axis must be parallel to

A yz-plane
B xy-plane
C zx-plane
D any plane

If a line has symmetric form (x−2)/1=(y+1)/2=(z−0)/3, then it passes through

A (1,2,3)
B (0,0,0)
C (2,1,0)
D (2,−1,0)

A line is in the plane when its direction is

A parallel to normal
B same as d value
C perpendicular to normal
D along intercepts

If u and v are direction vectors of two lines, the lines are skew if they are

A non-parallel, non-coplanar
B parallel and distinct
C intersecting always
D perpendicular always

Angle between direction ratios (1,2,2) and (2,1,2) is found using

A distance formula
B dot product
C section formula
D midpoint formula

For u=(1,2,2) and v=(2,1,2), u·v equals

A 7
B 6
C 8
D 5

Magnitude of direction vector (1,2,2) is

A √8
B 3
C √5
D √10

A line through origin with direction ratios (a,b,c) has parametric form

A x=at,y=bt,z=ct
B x=a+t,y=b+t,z=c+t
C x=a,y=b,z=c
D x=t/a,y=t/b,z=t/c

If direction ratios are (3,−3,0), the line is parallel to

A xz-plane
B yz-plane
C xy-plane
D z-axis

A plane parallel to z-axis must have equation not involving

A z term required
B x must be zero
C y must be zero
D z may be missing

A plane perpendicular to z-axis must be of form

A x = constant
B z = constant
C y = constant
D x+y = constant

The locus of points equidistant from two fixed points in 3D is a

A sphere
B line
C plane
D cone

If P(1,2,3) and Q(3,4,5), midpoint coordinates are

A (4,6,8)
B (1,2,3)
C (3,4,5)
D (2,3,4)

If a point divides PQ internally in ratio 2:1, it is closer to

A P point
B Q point
C origin always
D midpoint always

If a plane passes through points (1,0,0), (0,1,0), (0,0,1), its equation is

A x+y+z=1
B x+y+z=0
C x−y+z=1
D xyz=1

A line parallel to plane x+y+z=1 must satisfy for direction vector v

A v×(1,1,1)=0
B |v|=1 always
C v·(1,1,1)=0
D v=(1,1,1)

For vectors u and v, if u×v is nonzero, the vectors are

A always perpendicular
B not parallel
C always equal
D always unit

For two planes with normals n1 and n2, they are parallel when

A n1×n2=0
B n1·n2=0
C n1+n2=0 only
D |n1|=|n2|

Distance between two parallel planes 2x+3y−6z+4=0 and 2x+3y−6z−8=0 is

A 4/√49
B 8/√49
C 12/√49
D 16/√49

A point is on zx-plane when which condition holds

A x = 0
B z = 0
C x = y
D y = 0

If a line has direction cosines (l,m,n), then the sum l+m+n is

A always 1
B not fixed
C always 0
D always 3

The projection length of vector a on b equals

A (a×b)/|b|
B |a|/|b|
C (a·b)/|b|
D (a·b)/|a|

The vector projection of a on b equals

A [(a×b)/|b|²] b
B [(a·b)/|b|²] b
C [(a·b)/|a|²] a
D [(a·a)/|b|²] b

If a plane’s normal is (0,0,1), then plane is parallel to

A xy-plane
B yz-plane
C zx-plane
D y-axis

If two lines are perpendicular, their direction vectors satisfy

A cross product zero
B ratios equal
C dot product zero
D sums equal

A line is parallel to z-axis if its direction ratios are

A (k,0,0)
B (0,k,0)
C (k,k,0)
D (0,0,k)

If line direction ratios are (1,2,3), then a perpendicular direction can be

A (1,2,3)
B (2,−1,0)
C (2,4,6)
D (0,0,1)

A point-to-line shortest distance in space is measured along

A any segment joining
B parallel to line
C perpendicular from point
D along x-axis only

If two planes are coincident, their equations are

A proportional all coefficients
B different normals only
C perpendicular always
D different intercepts only

For sphere (x−a)²+(y−b)²+(z−c)²=r², the center is

A (−a,−b,−c)
B (a,b,c)
C (r,r,r)
D (0,0,0)

If equation x²+y²=16 has no z term, the surface is

A sphere radius 4
B plane parallel xy
C cylinder along z
D cone along z

If equation x²+y²=z², the surface represents a

A cylinder along z
B sphere at origin
C plane through origin
D right circular cone

If a line has direction cosines (1/2,1/2,1/√2), then l²+m²+n² equals

A 2
B 1
C 1/2
D √2

If a plane has equation 3x−4y+0z+7=0, it is parallel to

A z-axis direction
B xy-plane only
C z=constant planes
D x-axis only

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *