Wiki User
∙ 15y agoThe angle will stay the same. The only thing that changes is the line measurements.
Wiki User
∙ 15y ago28.5
magnifying the angle will do nothing to change the actual ANGLE itself, it will only make the "legs" of the angle look longer. so regardless to the magnification used, the angle will always measure the same.
36
The angle does not hit anything! A ray of light hits a mirror or glass block and the angle that the ray makes with the vertical at the point of contact is the angle of incidence.
It does not move from glass to air but undergoes internal refraction. That is, it is refracted back into the glass at the interface.
28.5
magnifying the angle will do nothing to change the actual ANGLE itself, it will only make the "legs" of the angle look longer. so regardless to the magnification used, the angle will always measure the same.
36
A lens, magnifying glass, microscope.
YES! if you have a clear or glass jar (must be done outside) you fill it with water and it magnifies the suns powerful rays and will burn things. (especially tinder).
a lens magnifies an object by using the pupal of your eyes and the glass from the lens to look up close. a lens magnifies an object by using the pupal of your eyes and the glass from the lens to look up close.
To make an object look larger in a photo, you can try positioning it closer to the camera, using a wide-angle lens, or utilizing the foreground-background relationship to create a sense of scale and depth. Additionally, framing the object against smaller elements can also help enhance its perceived size.
The glass magnifies the script because
No, a light ray does not bend when it enters a glass block perpendicularly. It will continue in a straight path without changing direction when entering the glass block at a 90-degree angle.
When a ray of light hits a glass block at a 90-degree angle (normal incidence), it continues to travel through the glass block without changing its direction. This is known as refraction without deviation.
The angle does not hit anything! A ray of light hits a mirror or glass block and the angle that the ray makes with the vertical at the point of contact is the angle of incidence.
Try pouring it with the glass on a forty-five degree angle so the beer slides down the inside wall of the glass and doesn't splash in the bottom. A frosty cold glass helps too.