yes they can, given the correct parameters.
When blue light beams intersect red light, they can either pass through each other unaffected, or they can combine to form a new color called magenta. The resulting color depends on the specific wavelengths and intensities of the two lights.
Never, they always cancel each other
Complementary colors cancel each other out in the color wheel.
They do not cancel each other out. Each serves a different purpose in cooking and baking.
Balanced forces, that are of equal strength.
Forces that cancel each other out are called balanced forces.
They react and cancel each other out. The process is called neutralization and it causes them to cancel out.
The Mach-Zehnder interferometer works by splitting a light beam into two paths, recombining them, and observing the interference pattern that results. This interference pattern is created when the two beams interact and either reinforce or cancel each other out, depending on their relative phase. By analyzing this pattern, information about the light's properties can be determined.
If they cancel, then their magnitudes must be equal.
Forces that don't cancel each other out are called unbalanced forces. When two or more forces act in opposite directions and do not cancel each other completely, they create a net force that results in an acceleration of the object.
Will not happen in free space. Phononicaly in a crystal you can mix light. No where else. Light beams crossing each other will not effect each other or combine. A mirror will not combine them either.( This may not be true in extreme lab conditions and new metamaterials. )
They do not cancel each other out but there is evidence that lansoprazole (Prevacid) may decrease the effectiveness of clopidogrel (Plavix).