It depends on how sensitive their equipment used to perceive their external world is and precisely how their software is designed to interact with the inputs from those devices! And it also depends on the limits of the robotic device as to what it can do in response to the softwares recognition of the inputs!
Control Tower
Sounds like your parking brake is on... this can also be an indicator that your brake fluid is very low
Its about the pressure of being on top and gravity represents the forces in life that want to bring you back down. He asks to "keep me where the light is" and not succumb or get caught up to the pressure.
If it is bad, replacing it will help with the vehicles emissions and put out the check engine light.
-- The speed of radio in air is the same as the speed of light in air.-- That in turn depends on the temperature, pressure, and humidity of the air.-- At 'STP' (standard temperature and pressure) the refractive index of airis listed as 1.00027.So the speed of light/radio would be 99.972% of the speed in vacuum.That's 299,711,536 meters per second, down from 299,792,458 in space.
yes they respond very well
The parts of the nervous system that respond to stimuli are called the sensory nervous system. This includes touch, pressure, hot and cold, sound, light, and taste.
they use the antennaes
chemicals, light, temperature
light, heat, soil, etc.
gravity light and touch are the three stimuli for plant tropisms.
Yes, clouds respond to light by being evaporated from water. By responding to gravity, clouds precipitate back into water. Although clouds respond to the environment, they are not living things.
They are pressure receptors so respond to their stimuli-pressure :) hope this helps
Sensory receptors are a type of sensory nerve. The sensory receptors that are specialized to respond to light energy are called stimuli.
If you put light in an animal's eye it will react by shutting it's eyes, covering it's eyes or in any other way it would usually respond.
Plants respond to several stimuli. Chief among them are light, gravity, and water. They also respond to temperature and to touch.
There are two main ways: growing up towards the light and growing down into the soil for water and nutrients.