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smaller
It will look dimmer and dimmer. Also, smaller and smaller (the angular diameter gets to be smaller and smaller).
planets
"eclipse"
If the brightness is 'B' right now, when the object is at a distance 'D' from your eye, then-- If the object moves closer, to only [ 1/2 D ] from you, the brightness increases to [ 4 B ].-- If the object moves farther away, to [ 2 D ] from you, the brightnesses decreases to [ 1/4 B ].
smaller
brighter btw add me on fb @kevin garcia
It will look dimmer and dimmer. Also, smaller and smaller (the angular diameter gets to be smaller and smaller).
It will look dimmer and dimmer. Also, smaller and smaller (the angular diameter gets to be smaller and smaller).
planets
No, the closer an object is to the lens, the more the spherical it is.
"eclipse"
the pressure increases
Yes, the closer you get the bigger the object will appear but to only the size of the object really is, and the farther away you get the small it will get
Understand that there is no relationship between the amount of steering required and the distance you are from the object
As an object moves closer to a concave lens, the virtual image, that is created on the same side of the lens as the object, will remain upright but will be reduced in size.
It increases in order to conserve angular momentum.