Chapter 8: Three Dimensional Geometry (Set-2)

In 3D space, a point is written using how many coordinates

A One coordinate
B Two coordinates
C Four coordinates
D Three coordinates

A point lies on the z-axis when which condition holds

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

Point (0, 5, 0) lies on which axis

A x-axis
B y-axis
C z-axis
D No axis

Coordinate planes divide space into octants because they intersect at

A A line only
B A circle only
C A random point
D The origin

If direction ratios are (2, −2, 1), one possible proportional set is

A (2, 2, 1)
B (−2, −2, 1)
C (4, −4, 2)
D (1, 1, 1)

If direction cosines are (l, m, n), then l represents

A cos with y-axis
B cos with z-axis
C sin with x-axis
D cos with x-axis

When a line makes 90° with x-axis, its direction cosine l equals

A 0
B 1
C −1
D 1/2

A line through (1,2,3) and (4,6,3) has direction ratios

A (−3,−4,0)
B (3,4,0)
C (4,6,3)
D (5,8,6)

For points P(1,0,0) and Q(1,0,5), distance PQ equals

A √5 units
B √26 units
C 6 units
D 5 units

The distance squared between (x1,y1,z1) and (x2,y2,z2) is

A Δx²+Δy²+Δz²
B (Δx+Δy+Δz)²
C Δx²Δy²Δz²
D √(Δx²+Δy²+Δz²)

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

A Closer to P
B Midpoint always
C Closer to Q
D Outside segment

Equation z = 0 represents

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

Equation x = 0 represents

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

The vector form of a line is written as

A r = a + tb
B r = a · b
C r = a × b
D r = a − b

If two lines have direction vectors u and v, then cosθ equals

A |u×v|/|u||v|
B |u|/|v|
C (u·v)/|u×v|
D (u·v)/|u||v|

If a plane is parallel to yz-plane, its equation looks like

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

Plane equation ax+by+cz+d=0 is called

A Linear plane form
B Quadratic surface
C Sphere form
D Cylindrical form

If a plane passes through origin, then in ax+by+cz+d=0

A a = 0
B b = 0
C c = 0
D d = 0

The intercept form x/a + y/b + z/c = 1 requires

A a=b=c only
B a,b,c nonzero
C d must be zero
D plane through origin

For a plane, the normal vector gives

A Perpendicular direction
B Parallel direction
C Midpoint location
D Axis intercepts

Two planes are parallel when their normals are

A Perpendicular vectors
B Zero vectors
C Parallel vectors
D Unit vectors only

Two planes are perpendicular when their normals satisfy

A Cross product zero
B Same magnitude
C Same direction
D Dot product zero

A line is parallel to plane ax+by+cz+d=0 if its direction vector v satisfies

A v · (a,b,c)=0
B v × (a,b,c)=0
C v = (a,b,c)
D |v| = 0

A line is perpendicular to plane ax+by+cz+d=0 if its direction is

A Perpendicular to normal
B Parallel to normal
C Parallel to plane
D In plane only

Equation of line through two points uses which direction vector

A P + Q
B P − Q + 1
C P × Q
D Q − P

If direction ratios are (a,b,c), then a valid direction vector is

A (a,b,c)
B (a+b+c)
C (ab,bc,ca)
D (a²,b²,c²)

In 3D, dot product of perpendicular vectors equals

A 1
B −1
C 0
D product of magnitudes

A line with direction ratios (0,0,5) is parallel to

A x-axis
B y-axis
C xy-plane
D z-axis

If direction cosines are (−l, −m, −n), the direction is

A Opposite direction
B Same direction
C Perpendicular always
D Undefined always

The angle between a line and x-axis is 0° when the line is

A Parallel to y-axis
B Parallel to x-axis
C Parallel to z-axis
D In yz-plane

A point (a,b,c) reflected in origin becomes

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

A plane parallel to xy-plane at height 7 has equation

A z = 7
B y = 7
C x = 7
D x+y = 7

The distance from point (2,0,0) to y-axis equals

A 0
B √2
C 2
D 4

A line in symmetric form (x−1)/2 = (y−2)/3 = (z−0)/1 passes through

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

For line x=1+2t, y=2+3t, z=t, direction ratios are

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

If two lines have direction vectors u and v, they are parallel when

A u × v = 0
B u·v = 0
C |u| = |v|
D u+v = 0 always

Shortest distance between two parallel lines in 3D is measured along

A Any joining line
B Direction vector
C Coordinate plane
D Perpendicular segment

If point P lies on plane ax+by+cz+d=0, then

A ax+by+cz+d = 1
B ax+by+cz+d = 0
C ax+by+cz+d > 0
D ax+by+cz+d < 0

If a plane contains x-axis, then which points lie on it

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

A plane through three non-collinear points is

A Many planes
B No plane exists
C Always parallel axes
D Unique plane

Two lines in 3D are skew when they are

A Parallel and coplanar
B Intersecting lines
C Non-parallel, non-coplanar
D Perpendicular and coplanar

If u·v is negative, then the angle between vectors is

A Obtuse angle
B Acute angle
C Right angle
D Zero angle

The distance from point (0,3,4) to origin equals

A 7
B √7
C 12
D 5

A line intersects a plane at one point when line is

A Parallel to plane
B Not parallel plane
C Lying in plane
D Perpendicular axes

If a line lies in a plane, then every point of line

A Fails plane equation
B Makes sphere
C Satisfies plane equation
D Makes cone

The image of point P in a plane is obtained by

A Rotation about axis
B Translation along z
C Scaling from origin
D Reflection across plane

Equation (x−1)²+(y−2)²+(z−3)²=9 represents

A Sphere radius 3
B Plane equation
C Cylinder equation
D Line equation

A cylinder in 3D is formed when one coordinate is

A Fixed constant
B Always negative
C Always zero
D Not involved equation

A cone in 3D generally has equation involving

A First degree only
B Second degree terms
C Only constants
D Only sine terms

Coordinate transformation by translation changes

A Origin shifts only
B Distances change
C Angles change
D Shape changes

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