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Light is for sure faster, and If you want to know what is faster than light its sound.
no light is faster
It depends on what it's reflecting off of.
Light doesn't shine. Light is what is emitted from things so we can see that they do shine.
A flat tin is brighter, because of its light, it is only on one direction and our eyes grab all the reflections. While corrugated tin, is not brighter as the other one, because of its reflected light diffuses in different directions and the amount of light that our eyes get are smaller.A flat tin is brighter, because of its light, it is only on one direction and our eyes grab all the reflections. While corrugated tin, is not brighter as the other one, because of its reflected light diffuses in different directions and the amount of light that our eyes get are smaller.
The sun rotates counter-clockwise. It doesn't move as a solid mass, however. It rotates faster at the equator and slower at the poles. It takes 27 days to rotate at the equator and 31 days to rotate at the poles.
Lux is a measurement of light, the brightness at source. The higher the number the brighter the sourceIllumination, the light output of a light bulb.
Lux is a measurement of light, the brightness at source. The higher the number the brighter the sourceIllumination, the light output of a light bulb.
Switching to a brighter light source. Switch to a light source with a higher intensity.
The speed of light is constant, regardless of how far it is from its source.
Yes, the dash light dimmer switch is located next to the headlght switch. You rotate it one way and the lights dim out, rotate it the other way and they get brighter, keep rotating it that direction and the interior light comes on.
Sun light is more brighter than the light from flashlight in house.
Sun light is more brighter than the light from flashlight in house.
The closer a light source is to your eye, the brighter it appears - intensity included. The closer you are to the source, the larger the angle of the cone; your pupil as the base and the source as the point. The larger the angle from the point, the more light entering your eye. Too close to the source and your retinal area becomes the limiting factor.
Well, assuming that:the light is powered by a dynamo that is driven by the wheelthat pedalling downhill means that you're going faster than usualthen the light will become brighter, because a dynamo(=generator) gives off more power the faster it spins.
Other things being equal, yes - with the same force, you can make the light object rotate faster. The amount of force required to make an object rotate depend on the mass, the size, and the general shape of the object. And of course on the rotational velocity you want to achieve. Do some reading on "moment of inertia" - for rotational motion, that is the equivalent of "mass" for linear motion.
While light is reflected from the moon, it is not a particularly large amount. Why use the moon when the sun is a thousand times brighter?