Probably yes !
When a pencil is placed in a glass of water, it appears to bend or break at the water's surface due to refraction of light. This is because light changes speed when it moves from air to water, causing the illusion of the pencil bending or breaking.
nothing would happen because fungi dont carry out photosynthesis.
day
daydaylightdaybreakdaytime
it would die ! @
Light is not directly affected by magnetic fields. However, when light passes through a magnetic field, the orientation of its electric and magnetic fields can be altered, a phenomenon known as the Faraday effect. This effect can cause the polarization of light to rotate, which can be useful in various scientific and technological applications.
because rainbows happen when rain water breaks up the light of the sun but if it is not sunny there is no light for the water to break up
I have the impression that light is not affected by magnetic fields - at least in a vacuum. If traveling through other substances, the magnetic field can change the light's polarization.
Iron filings are small shavings or particles of iron that are often used in experiments to visualize magnetic fields. They align themselves along the magnetic field lines when a magnet is placed near them, making the magnetic field visible.
Light, or electromagnetic radiation, is generally unaffected by magnetic fields. Magnetic fields don't "bend" light, though photons will follow the curvature of spacetime around massive gravitational fields.
Light is an electromagnetic wave, that is, an oscillation of both the electric and the magnetic fields.
Light is classified as an electromagnetic wave when electrical and magnetic fields vibrate in a light wave. This type of wave does not require a medium to propagate and can travel through empty space.