A stroboscopic light, or strobe light, is a device which discharges flashes of light which causes moving objects to appear stationary or slow-moving. The flashing light has been known to cause seizures in people who suffer from epilepsy.
The movements of strobe lights are a classic example of this.
light source
no because light from the light bulb is electrical and the sun is not
Source light is light coming directly from a light source/emitter (i.e. a light bulb, the sun, stars, etc.). Reflected light is light coming indirectly from the light source/emitter. That could be reflected, refracted light, etc.
blue light and red light make purple light
1942: abbreviation of stroboscopic.
The movements of strobe lights are a classic example of this.
If the fre. Of the tacho. Is equal to the shaft
stroboscopic motion
A stroboscope uses a series of flashes to make a fast moving object seem slower. A stroboscopic tachometer has a scale that reads either in revolutions per minute or flashes per minute.
to avoid stroboscopic effect.
Whilst some propellers are comparatively slow there is an effect called the stroboscopic effect, which at certain revolutions, synchronise reflected light from the blades. This fools the eye into believing the propellers are turning much more slowly than they are.
Janice Sanner has written: 'Stroboscopic photography as an instrument for investigating human movement'
strobestrōb/informalnounnoun: strobe; plural noun: strobes1. a stroboscope.a stroboscopic lamp. "strobe lights dazzled her"2.North American an electronic flash for a camera.verbverb: strobe; 3rd person present: strobes; past tense: strobed; past participle: strobed; gerund or present participle: strobing1. flash intermittently."the light of the fireworks strobed around the room"light as if with a stroboscope."a neon sign strobed the room" 2.exhibit or give rise to strobing.
Modern ones are stroboscopic, electronic, fluorescent, generate little heat. Obsolete one-shot expendable Flashbulbs were incandescent and (went out) in effect exploded- after one shot , could not be reused- these are mercifully obsolete. You have probably heard the story of the Hippopotamus who succumbed to some stomach ailment after ingesting spent flash-bulbs that were tossed in the beast"s water supply- they broke up in his stomach, and ugh,perforated the lining with pieces of broken glass- a very painful death for the River Horse. This got in the papers.
Xenon is used in Electron tubes, bactericidal lamps, strobe lamps, xenon lamps for surgery, and vehicle headlights (more so in planes and boats). Xenon is used for making electron tubes, stroboscopic lamps, lamps used to excite ruby lasers for generating coherent light. Xenon is also used in the nuclear energy field in bubble chambers, probes, and other applications where a high molecular weight is of value. The perxenates are used in analytical chemistry as oxidizing agents. Xenon is used in strobe lights and also in photography Xenon is one among the inert gas family. It can be used in discharge lamps to produce green light. This green light would be used in ruby laser to take Chromium atoms to excited level. It is used in several different applications including the AeroSpace industry, as a propellant, as a general anesthetic and in the production of arc lights.
Sun light Moon light Candle light Fire light Torch light Star light Morning light Electric light