They all go to the focus point of the parabola. The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
The light will start to diverge instead of being focused at a single point. The farther the light source is moved from the focus, the more the light will spread out and the less focused it will become.
When a wave is partially reflected at a boundary, some of the energy is transmitted into the new medium while the remaining energy is reflected back. This results in a division of energy between the reflected and transmitted waves.
The shortwave radiation that reaches Earth's surface and is not reflected is absorbed by the surface, warming it up.
When a wave is reflected, it bounces off a surface and changes direction. The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. This can cause interference patterns if multiple reflected waves interact with each other.
When a wave is reflected, its speed remains unchanged. The speed of a wave is determined by the properties of the medium it is traveling through, so when the wave is reflected, it continues to travel at the same speed in that medium.
The light will start to diverge instead of being focused at a single point. The farther the light source is moved from the focus, the more the light will spread out and the less focused it will become.
it gets reflected
Depending on the object, it may be reflected, absorbed, refracted or internally reflected.
Nothing happens dddfffffff
It goes back into space.
You get black
It is either transmitted or reflected. Often, different portions of the light do both.
They are reflected at the angle of incidence.
It is reflected
it becomes louder
Reflected but not inverted
It gets absorbed or reflected