microscope
A microscope is a scientific tool that can make objects appear larger than they really are. By using lenses to magnify the image, a microscope allows researchers to study and observe tiny structures and organisms that would otherwise be invisible to the naked eye.
Yes.
Yes, the closer you get the bigger the object will appear but to only the size of the object really is, and the farther away you get the small it will get
It moves to the left pretty much but I can,t really give you much of a scientific answer why.
You really can't do exactly what you want. The closest you can get is to view an ENTIRE SCENE including this red object using a red filter, with the scene brightly illuminated (with either red or white light). Then your visual system will have no basis to assign the color red to this red object and it will appear as a shade of gray (to black or white, depending on how much light is absorbed by this object).
Matter is what is in an object...it is what something is made of.Weight is the effect of gravity on an object.The more matter in an object, the greater effect gravity has on that object, making it weigh more than another object with less matter.Don't forget that size does not always show how heavy something is...If you have a small object which is really dense (contains a lot of matter), it may weight more than a larger object with a low density.
low angle= to make object appear larger than it really is and to make audience vulnerable....... high angle= to make object appear smaller than what it really is and to create the effect that they are insignificant........
Yes.
really.. the answer is that the volume also gets larger
Yes, the closer you get the bigger the object will appear but to only the size of the object really is, and the farther away you get the small it will get
Yes.
It means that the object you are looking it will appear eight times larger than it really is. x8.0 and 8.0x mean the same thing. The X means times.
If they appear at all, they're larger than they "really are", because they don't actually exist in the sense of being physical objects.Maybe you're asking a different question related to a particular type of map projection? If so, which one?
No. It's really an "optical illusion". See Link for full explanation
i dont really understand this question but what i do know is what i will tell you it is the amount of detail in an object
It moves to the left pretty much but I can,t really give you much of a scientific answer why.
Macro lenses will help your camcorder see smaller images closely and can be used to make items larger than they really are.
You really can't do exactly what you want. The closest you can get is to view an ENTIRE SCENE including this red object using a red filter, with the scene brightly illuminated (with either red or white light). Then your visual system will have no basis to assign the color red to this red object and it will appear as a shade of gray (to black or white, depending on how much light is absorbed by this object).