because refraction is greater for shorter wavelengths.
for a narrow aperture, you may not notice the difference. but for wide aperture, you will, because you are involving more of its curvature.
check what a prism does, you'll see the same effect.
The further the aperture is from the optical axis of the lens, the more to the side of the lens the incident light falls. The further the light falls from the optical axis, the greater the effects of chromatic aberration. This is because different wavelengths of light have different refractive indices (dispersion). Because of Snell's Law, n1sintheta1=n2sintheta2, the greater the angle of incidence, the more pronounced the effects of the difference in refractive indices. Spherical aberration further enhances the chromatic dispersion.
The future tense of "evident" is "will be evident."
The truth was evident ("in plainview", "obvious", logical)
evident means there is evidence. example: it's evident that he was the murderer because his finger prints are on the weapon. --amanda
Clear and evident are synonyms.
The police found an evident.
His frown made it evident that he was not pleased
evident means there is evidence. example: it's evident that he was the murderer because his finger prints are on the weapon. --amanda
yes (the answer's self-evident if you're taking the exam)
Sherlock Holmes looked for evidence to figure out a mystery.
Fate versus free will are philosophical positions that are evident in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. -- 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the position of fate is evidenced by the relentless realization of the dreadful fate of killing a father and marrying a mother. It also is manifest in the insights of Teiresias the blind prophet and in some of the words of Theban King Oedipus. But at the same time, the position of free will is represented by Oedipus as well as his wife Jocasta and her first husband Laius. All three make concerted efforts to sabotage fate and subvert divine will.
you cannot answer this question, because it makes no sense at all. "what did Thomas Jefferson" is alright- but "was self evident"..... what was self evident?