Well, we can 'see' the air, but bees have short, fuzzy hairs that help them sense it even better. Sort-of like a fly. Have you ever tried to smash one fly? Here's what happens: You sneak up a few feet near it. Then you get closer and closer... WHOOSH! The fly sensed your delicate movement! Same thing with a bee. A bee or any related arachnid/insect could even know you're there if you're behind it!
Aside from artificial selection humans are a large part of all other organisms environments. So, any barriers humans erect could bring about allopactric speciation, though I can not think of any specific examples there. Also, human caused extinctions can cause adaptive radiation of a species into the niche of a species driven extinct by humans.
No. Dogs are different from humans. For example, dogs cannot process many colours, unlike humans. Dogs have the pack instinct (resulting in their loyalty), while humans do not. Dogs only mate in breeding season, while humans mate anytime.
I think there are more rats in the world than humans.
yes narwhals do kill humans they kill humans because they think humans are a threat they kill them by stabbing there horn through them. Man I sure love having the education of a Mexican.
What do you think? Really? Have you ever heard anyone purr? No.
Just found this one out. The answer is: gravity.
rainbows ....... i think?
Electromagnetic radiation, particularly in the form of visible light and infrared radiation. These wavelengths are responsible for heating the Earth's surface and driving processes like photosynthesis.
Answer Yes, you can. I think the answer is no. A physical object in a vacuum can have some energy/heat in it, and the energy associated with electromagnetic radiation can have energy/heat associated with it, but the vacuum itself cannot. ______________________________________________________________________ There is no such thing as a vacuum.
Thermal energy cannot be transferred through a vacuum by conduction or convection. However, it can still be transferred by radiation, where electromagnetic waves carry the energy from one object to another without the need for a medium.
We have detectors on our bodies to detect electromagnetic radiation that we refer to as 'light',and also radiation in the far infrared that we refer to as 'heat'.A lot of people think we're also able to detect EM radiation in other bands, but scientific experimentationdoesn't support that.Yet ? ~ ~ oooweeeooo ~ ~ ~ ~
well I'm not a genius but i think i know another word for heat radiation is thermal radiation. but hey I'm not the computer.
Visible light waves
An electric cooker grill typically emits infrared radiation to cook food. This type of radiation heats the food by transferring energy through electromagnetic waves, similar to how the sun warms the Earth.
You don't even have to go to "... the deep reaches of space". Electromagnetic radiation is also the only way to communicate with the International Space Station right now, roughly 400 km (250 miles) up. In fact, now that I think of it, electromagnetic radiation is the only way to communicate in real time with a person living on the next block, except perhaps for smoke signaling.
Radio waves, Microwaves, Infrared, Visible Light, Ultraviolet, X-Rays, Gamma Rays etc. are all Electromagnetic radiation, just at different frequencies.In physics, radiation is any process by which energy travels from one body to another.When most people hear radiation they think of ionising radiation, which is a radiation that is strong enough to ionize atoms.X-Rays are both Electromagnetic radiation and ionising radiation, because of the later it is a health hazard.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiography
I think that they are both the same, as they are both electromagnetic radiation. Hence they both travel at the speed of light.