Yes, all waves create interference (such as light waves)
To produce an interference pattern, the light must be coherent - which happens when a single beam of light is split. Two different flashlights are independent of one another.
to produce interference pattern the sources should be coherent but two independent sources cannot produce such pattern. hence they won't produce interference fringes
plasma
Yes. They're cool compared to incandescent bulbs of the same light output, but they do produce some heat.
No. Consider florescent lights and florescent sea life.
Three. Usually red, green and blue.
to produce interference pattern the sources should be coherent but two independent sources cannot produce such pattern. hence they won't produce interference fringes
The duration of Distant Lights is 1.75 hours.
Distant Lights was created on 2003-07-31.
It is very rare for radio was to cause interference with the Kichler under-cabinet lights. If it does cause interference I would call the people who installed it or if you did it yourself find the local dealership and have a talk with them.
Because there are a lots of lights in the stadium.
There is little "light interference" from city lights.
That would be Alnilam around 1300 lights years distant.
The ground's warmth creates a upward convection current of air which refracts the distant lights we see as "twinkling."
yes
Because they give off RF energy. This Radio Frequency signal will interfere with any radio near by. Cheap shop lights are the worst. More expensive well made fluorescent lights limit the amount of interference and should not be a problem. A loose ground wire will also cause the light to hum and interfere even more. High Intensity lights are best for an unheated garage.
neon gas lights produce only red light
by making light