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Light does not interact with other light (photons don't interact with each other), so there is no blockage, and no shadow if you cross two beams.

2007-10-30 15:16:45 · answer #1 · answered by Dr. R 7 · 0 0

I really don;t know what you are asking, but here goes: Light does not cast a shadow when going through certain ultra-transparent objects, such as air, glass, pure water, dark matter. Also, since light consists of particles, it can be bent by gravity and ulttra strong magnets. In FACT, the Russians say that they have created such portable invisibility field that can be carried on their MiG fighters. Hope this helps, oh yeah, If you think about it, we can't see infared light shadows, ultravoilet shadows, etc. A shadow is defined as the absence of light caused by an object blocking said light. So really, there are INVISIBLE shadows all around us that we cannot see. If you shine a light into an ultra reflective chamber, there shouldn't be any shadows there. Please tell me what you mean by "adaptive characteristics", sounds interesting, IM me

2007-10-30 20:40:31 · answer #2 · answered by pyrojelli 2 · 0 0

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