Yes. If your ray's endpoint is the letter A and it goes on forever in the direction of the letter B, that is not the same as a ray that starts at the letter B and goes on forever in the direction of the letter A.
So always name your ray starting with the endpoint letter.
infrared, ROY G BIV, ultraviolet, xray, gamma ray, cosmic ray That's the order they fall in when you sort them by frequency or wavelength.
Most members of the ray family have 'ray' at the end of their name, such as stingray, manta ray, electric ray, eagle ray, devil ray, bat ray, round ray and cownose ray.
The name radium comes from a Latin word radius, which means ray. It was named this because the chemists found that photographic effects were similar at light rays.
a manta ray
Gamma, X-Ray, Ultraviolet, Visible, Infrared, Microwaves, and then Radio waves. (from smallest to largest)
naming a line is different from naming a ray. say for example ,if we have line AB,this is similar to line BA while ray AB is different from ray BA.
When naming a ray the endpoint is written first.
The main character in "The Naming of Names" by Ray Bradbury is a young boy named Nils. The story is about Nils and his experience exploring the power of words and the act of naming things.
Its a type of stingray which inspired the naming of the cygnus constellation. ((((((((((((((((())))))))))))))))
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There is no intrinsic difference. Either can be named using the names of any two points on them, or using any letter or symbol of any alphabet - including symbols that you have made up.
Ratchet does get small in Ratchet and Clank Size Matters by a weapon or gadget named the Shrink o Ray does exactly what you think
ray rad[ian]
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