Yes. When the sun hits the convex glass, the rays are concentrated into one point. that point heats so fast that anything the beam hits, it'll burn.
Yes, using a magnifying glass to burn an ant is considered utilizing solar energy. The magnifying glass focuses the Sun's rays to create heat that can burn objects, in this case, an ant.
When you place a magnifying glass over an ant and the sun is out, the light from the sun hits the convex glass and becomes concentrated at a certain point. That point will eventually become hot enough to burn the ant.
with a magnifying glass
On the ant hill you use the magnifying glass to produce heat by the bottom of the ant hill. You can also catch your pygmys on fire by doing that.
about 5 seconds till it dies( depends on the type of ant, I fried the fire ants on my sidewalk).I don't know how long it takes to set the ant on fire.
You have to take damage to level up. Sometimes they just need a little damage. Sometimes it's almost enough to kill them. You can squeeze them with your finger (hold A & B at the same time) or move them into the sun and burn them with a magnifying glass. It's pretty cruel.
The function of magnifying glasses are to magnify certain small objects if necessary to see the world in a better way. An example would be to use it to examine an ant crawling into its ant hole.
no.
Large ant farms can be purchased from a variety of stores. Walmart, Insect Kits, Ant Farm Universe, and Instructables sell large ant farms. One could also make one by gluing glass sides together with aquarium cement.
lantern
A spider could eat an ant
An ant farm is a glass-sided dirt-filled box containing ants, usually used as a biological study tool.