Yes, especially when the sun is low.
The object's shadow appears larger than the object because the sun's rays hit the object at an angle, causing the shadow to stretch away from the light source. This creates the illusion of the shadow being larger than the object itself.
A shadow can be smaller than the object casting it when the light source is close to the object. This causes the shadow to be more compressed and appear smaller in relation to the object.
No, an object shadow cannot be smaller than the object that is casting it. The size of the shadow is determined by the distance between the object and the light source, as well as the angle of the light hitting the object.
Yes, a shadow can be smaller than the object casting it. This can happen when the light source is very close to the object or when the object is very close to the surface on which the shadow is cast. The size of the shadow is determined by the angle of the light rays hitting the object and the distance between the object and the surface.
A shadow is bigger than you but doesn't weigh anything.
The object's shadow appears larger than the object because the sun's rays hit the object at an angle, causing the shadow to stretch away from the light source. This creates the illusion of the shadow being larger than the object itself.
A shadow can be smaller than the object casting it when the light source is close to the object. This causes the shadow to be more compressed and appear smaller in relation to the object.
No, an object shadow cannot be smaller than the object that is casting it. The size of the shadow is determined by the distance between the object and the light source, as well as the angle of the light hitting the object.
Yes, a shadow can be smaller than the object casting it. This can happen when the light source is very close to the object or when the object is very close to the surface on which the shadow is cast. The size of the shadow is determined by the angle of the light rays hitting the object and the distance between the object and the surface.
Shadow.
Shadow from light source always bigger than object but shadow from the sun is the same size as object. Great different is due to the distance of light source. Size of shadow is double at distance x 2 source to object. Shadow is always bigger than object. You will notice your shadow is bigger in light bulb or stadium spot light but the shadow from sun is the same size as object. This is due to great distance from sun to us (150 million km approximately) the double distance to see our shadow to be double is at 300 million km from the Sun. at merely 10 m or 100 km is almost no distinguishable different in shadow size to the object. We then presume shadow cause from sunlight is equal to the size of the object.
A shadow is bigger than you but doesn't weigh anything.
Shadow
When the light source is bigger than the object.
[object Object]
Shadow is stronger than any object in the world although Static is stronger than any object in the universe so Static is stronger
No. There is no animal that can eat something bigger than itself. A king snake has a stomach and it has limits.