it evaporates and becomes moisture in d air
Use Lift-Off or Goo Gone.
Light bounces off a flat mirror in a process called reflection. The angle at which the light approaches the mirror is equal to the angle at which it reflects off the mirror, following the law of reflection.
bad luck
Rainbows are caused by sunlight refracting (passing through) and reflecting (bouncing off) of drops of water (mist) in the air. If the mist moves, the rainbow moves. When it moves past a certain degree of angle, you can no longer see it - but somebody else standing somewhere else might be able to. Eventually when the mist is gone, the rainbow is gone.
If you shine a mirror at another mirror, the light will bounce off the first mirror, reflect off the second mirror, and then bounce back to the first mirror. This will create an infinite loop of reflections as the light continues to bounce back and forth between the mirrors.
When you shine a beam of light on a mirror, the light is reflected off the mirror's surface. The angle of incidence (the angle at which the light beam hits the mirror) is equal to the angle of reflection (the angle at which the light beam bounces off the mirror). This is known as the law of reflection.
When a light wave strikes a mirror, it undergoes reflection, which means it bounces off the mirror's surface. The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. The mirror changes the direction of the light wave but does not change its speed or frequency.
You May Just Get Aids :)
Then the scales with be gone.
goo gone. rubbing alcohol. windex. goo gone is the best of the three
When a beam of light from a flashlight hits a mirror, it gets reflected off the mirror surface. The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence, following the law of reflection. This results in the beam bouncing off the mirror and changing direction.
When you shine a light into a mirror, the light reflects off the mirror's surface and bounces back in the opposite direction. This is called specular reflection. The angle at which the light hits the mirror will be equal to the angle at which it bounces off.