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Special curved lenses are used to make objects larger. It is a sense of scale and perception that makes distant objects magnified.
because the sun is shinning on the moon which makes the moon visible
Telescope or
yes
No.
A telescope. :-)
An instrument that makes small, distant objects visible is a telescope. Binoculars and scopes are also used for seeing long distance.
The microscope makes transparent objects visible to enable study.
Chemicals in certain objects can reflect certain values of visible light.
telescope or maybe binoculars
Binoculars? Telescope? Glasses? Contacts? They all do.
The work of one who makes images or visible representation of objects; imitation work; images in general,
The sun makes everything in the solar system visible.
Many objects do appear black or white when light falls on them. If they are black, it means that the object is absorbing all wavelengths of visible light and not reflecting any. If they are white, it means that they are reflecting all wavelengths of visible light and not absorbing any. The color of an object is due to the wavelengths of light that it reflects.
Special curved lenses are used to make objects larger. It is a sense of scale and perception that makes distant objects magnified.
wavelength from 0.9 to 7.0 so in a way you can say that the wavethength is short.First, a basic fact: light in the SWIR band is not visible to the human eye. The visible spectrum extends from wavelengths of 0.4 microns (blue, nearly ultraviolet to the eye) to 0.7 microns (deep red). Wavelengths longer than visible wavelengths can only be seen by dedicated sensors, such as InGaAs. But, although light in the shortwave infrared region is not visible to the eye, this light interacts with objects in a similar manner as visible wavelengths. That is, SWIR light is reflective light; it bounces off of objects much like visible light. As a result of its refelctive nature, SWIR light has shadows and contrast in its imagery. Images from an InGaAscameraare comparable to visible images in resolution and detail; however, SWIR images are not in color. This makes objects easily recognizeable and yields one of the tactical advantages of the SWIR, namely, object or individual identification.
gravity is what makes objects fall