[color=#000000]Just as a line is made of an infinite number of points, a plane is made of an infinite number of lines that are right next to each other. A plane is flat, and it goes on infinitely in all directions. A sheet of paper represents a small part of one plane. But actually a sheet of paper is much thicker than a plane, because a plane has no thickness. It is only as thick as a point, which takes up no space at all. So a plane is like an imaginary sheet of paper, infinitely wide and long, but with no thickness. [br][br]When we talk about a triangle or a square, these shapes are like pieces cut out of a plane, as if you had cut them out of a piece of paper. But is there another way to create these polygons?[br][br]Some geometers are very interested what happens when a plane intersects or cuts a 3-Dimensional shape.[br][br]Examine the [i]GeoGebra[/i] workspace.[br][br]The light blue-green rectangle represents, like a piece of paper, a small part of a plane. [br][br]The dark green shape represents the polygon that would be formed if the plane actually cut the triangular pyramid.[br][br]You can use the slider to MOVE THE PLANE forwards and backwards. [br]The ROTATE THE VIEW point can be used to look at the pyramid from different angles.[br][br]Experiment with these tools. Observe what polygons are created when a plane slices through a triangular pyramid.[br][br]What shapes did you observe?[/color]