Want this question answered?
It's quite easy- take a magnifying glass and a dry piece of a paper ( preferably newspaper ) and go to a place where appropriate sunlight is available. Let the light of sun fall on to the magnifying glass. Bring the piece of paper beneath the magnifying glass. Now your objective is to move the magnifying glass up and down in such a way that the light emerging from the magnifying glass concentrates to a point. Hold the both things in the same position for a while, and soon you will be able to see the miracle, fire without a matchstick ! Enjoy!
Yes you can. You need to focus the sunlight through the lense on a dry burning material for long enough. It works the same way as a magnifying glass.
Use a microscope or magnifying glass. (Something that magnifies objects.)
To make distant things closer they use a telescope, to make close things larger they use a sense or magnifying glass, to make very small things larger they use a microscope. to make incredibly small things clearer they use mathematics.
The lenses of a microscope have shapes that bend light rays, and when we view those bent rays, the object appears larger--a magnifying glass has the same effect.
It's quite easy- take a magnifying glass and a dry piece of a paper ( preferably newspaper ) and go to a place where appropriate sunlight is available. Let the light of sun fall on to the magnifying glass. Bring the piece of paper beneath the magnifying glass. Now your objective is to move the magnifying glass up and down in such a way that the light emerging from the magnifying glass concentrates to a point. Hold the both things in the same position for a while, and soon you will be able to see the miracle, fire without a matchstick ! Enjoy!
Yes, if you focus the rays of the sun using a magnifying glass on a small and dry surface, such as paper or leaves, it can concentrate the light and heat enough to start a fire. This is due to the magnifying glass converging the sunlight onto a small area, increasing the intensity of the heat.
no where but if you want to make fire give the black puffle an o-berri and you have fire
Yes you can. You need to focus the sunlight through the lense on a dry burning material for long enough. It works the same way as a magnifying glass.
the magnifying glass must be positioned so as to focus the light from the sun on a single point (ex. kindling), causing heat and hopefully, a small fire
a convex lense
put the magifying glass over sun
there is a convex lens that magnify's what you want
Ogle her with a magnifying glass.
The refraction.
microscope
I am a magnifying glass!