your battery might be too hot or not good. also you might have the wrong channel in your controler. check the frequency.
When blue light is shone on a red solid, the red solid will absorb the blue light and reflect or transmit the red color. This is because the red solid absorbs blue light due to its selective absorption properties.
Yes, it is possible for light to exist in a solid state through a phenomenon called "slow light" or "frozen light," where light is effectively trapped and slowed down within a solid medium such as a crystal or a Bose-Einstein condensate.
The bulb itself is a solid.
The light wave will interact with the atoms and molecules in the solid, causing them to vibrate and re-emit the light wave in different directions. The speed of light in a solid is slower than in a vacuum due to these interactions.
Light travels from a flashlight to a solid through the process of reflection and absorption. When the light beam hits the solid surface, some of it is absorbed, and some is reflected. The absorbed light energy can cause the atoms in the solid to vibrate, generating heat.
An aeroplane is a solid: constructed mainly from light-weight aluminium.
Light travels faster through liquid than through solid. The speed of light in a medium is determined by the refractive index of the material, which is lower in liquid compared to solid materials.
A solid yellow light on a traffic signal means to slow down and prepare to stop before the light turns red. It indicates that the light is about to change to red.
No. Because it is not a solid or gas.
Light is not a matter.It is a type of energy.
The same with when a light hits a solid; the energy either gets reflected or absorbed. If light hits a dark colored solid, most of the light will be absorbed, and the black object will get warm.If light hits a light-colored solid, most of the light will be reflected, and the white object will stay cool.By the way, the same thing happens to both heat and light, because heat is a form of light; heat is also called infrared light.Further answerIt does depend somewhat on what form this heat is in. If it's radiation then the answer above is fine. But if it's in the form of say, hot air, then there won't be any reflection, just conduction of the heat from the air to the solid.
Light is neither solid nor liquid, but, it is difficult to discern whether it is a gas either, as the particles in gases are not bound like light particles. So, it isn't really either of the three, although, if you say that light particles are bound together, then you could say that light is a solid.