Tigers, as with all cats, have a reflective layer behind the retina. This allows them to use the light twice in the retina, making it much easier to see at night. When cat's eyes appear to glow, you are seeing the escaping reflected light from this surface.
Yes, as it does for most felines.
no
A ultra violet light will make things glow.
when the paint is stuck to a wall with a window next to it, it absorbs light then uses it when its dark
all you have to do is buy one of the glowing ones and expose it to light. The silver ones are not glow in the dark.
becasue they are glow in the dark and some molecules in the rock are flourescent and that's what make it glow
blue
Who doesn't love glow-in-the-dark Halloween costumes, stickers, or glow sticks? Many bugs glow in the dark, too. Unlike glow toys, these bugs make their own light. These bugs are bioluminescent (by-oh-lew-muh-NESS-ent). Chemicals in their bodies combine to make them shine. Although bioluminescent animals light up, they don't give off heat like a light bulb does. Fireflies are the most common glow-in-the-dark insects. They light up to communicate with each other as they look for a mate.
they are made of silicone then the charge it up under a black light to make it glow
I'm not sure if they make glow in the dark, but they make neon and if that is not good enough, you can buy glow in the dark fabric paint and turn them glow in the dark by yourself. they will be your custom designed glow in the dark converse if you do it by yourself
Yes, the term 'glow-in-the-dark' is an adjective, a compound word that describes a noun (glow in the dark paint; a glow-in-the-dark arrow).The term 'glow in the dark' is also a predicate(the part of a sentence that includes the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to that verb). Example: I love to see the fireflies glow in the dark.
No. But, you can buy glow in the dark nail polish.