Coordinates, latitude and longitude, or address.
Exact locations in space are called coordinates. Coordinates specify the position of an object in relation to a reference point or system. They are often expressed using dimensions such as latitude, longitude, and altitude in Earth's geocentric coordinate system or using celestial coordinates for objects in the sky.
Object space refers to the 3D space in which an object exists, with coordinates defined by its size and position in relation to a fixed point of reference. Image space, on the other hand, refers to the 2D space in which an image is rendered for display, typically on a screen, with coordinates measured in pixels. The transformation from object space to image space involves mapping 3D objects to 2D images for visualization.
A specific location in space can be identified by its coordinates, which can include its distance from a reference point and its direction relative to other objects. Astronomers often use celestial coordinates such as right ascension and declination to pinpoint the location of celestial objects in the sky.
The location of an object in space is called its position. This can be described using coordinates such as latitude, longitude, and altitude in relation to a reference point.
You need two coordinates, not one, to specify a point. To calculate the slope, simply calculate (difference in y-coordinates) / (difference in x-coordinates).
the coordinates are for finding planets in space
Yes, it is possible to calculate the chromaticity coordinates using absorbance values. The best way to calculate the chromaticity coordinates using absorbance values is by using the formula x = x/x+y+z.
If you have an n-sided polygon in 2-dimensional space an nx2 array, with each column consisting of the coordinates of a vertex, will represent the polygon. In 3-dimensional space you will need a nx3 matrix. Once you have the coordinates of the vertices you can use appropriate formulae to calculate the side lengths, angles, etc.
The coordinates are X-56, Y-52.
To get the slope, calculate (difference of y-coordinates) / (difference of x-coordinates).
Curvilinear coordinate systems are a means of describing an object/point's position based on angle and distance from the origin. For example, polar coordinates are Curvilinear coordinates for R2 (2D space). Spherical coordinates are Curvilinear coordinates for R3 (3D space) If you need to know more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvilinear_coordinates
use the coordinates
You use it in space to find the planets
You do not have 3 coordinates in the Cartesian plane. The Cartesian plane is a plane and is therefore 2 dimensional. In 2 dimensional space you require only 2 coordinates. 3 coordinates are required to locate a point in 3-dimensional space but then it cannot be a Cartesian PLANE.
Three coordinates suffice to define a location in space. On a surface only two coordinates are required.
In 2-dimensional space, it is the difference between their y-coordinates, in 3-dimensional space, it is the difference between their z-coordinates.