Light doesn't shine. Light is what is emitted from things so we can see that they do shine.
Yes, a 100-watt light bulb is brighter than a 60-watt light bulb because it produces more light.
A flashlight appears brighter on closer objects due to the Inverse Square Law of Light, which states that light intensity decreases with the square of the distance from the source. This means that the closer an object is to the flashlight, the more light it receives per unit area, making it appear brighter.
Yes, brighter light will eject more electrons from a photosensitive surface than dimmer light of the same frequency. This is because brighter light carries more energy per photon, resulting in a higher probability of ejecting electrons from the surface.
A "beam" or "ray" of light would best describe the light that shines from a flashlight.
An incident ray is the ray of light that shines on a mirror. This is the ray that strikes the mirror's surface.
I'm not too sure what other people think. I know that the Sun shines brighter than Sirius.
The Sun Shines Brighter was created in 2005.
stars are planets and it shines because light is reflected so...depends on what kind of lamp ur talking about
because it shines.
Sun light is more brighter than the light from flashlight in house.
Sun light is more brighter than the light from flashlight in house.
The big stars have more hydrogen to burn and has much more surface area thats why it shines brighter.
Films use colors... The colors are dimmer because when the light shines through it will appear brighter.
This is a difficult question to answer, as the brightness of light is itself perceived, rather than actual. In some ways, light is brighter than you can perceive it, simply because another person can perceive that light to be brighter than you yourself perceived it. The brightness of light to the eye is relative.
yes
Yes, a 100-watt light bulb is brighter than a 60-watt light bulb because it produces more light.
A flashlight appears brighter on closer objects due to the Inverse Square Law of Light, which states that light intensity decreases with the square of the distance from the source. This means that the closer an object is to the flashlight, the more light it receives per unit area, making it appear brighter.