SINE COSINE WAVES on Graph Paper with Wheel1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00Animation of a sine wave or sinusoidal wave (sine curve or sine function) and its corresponding cosine wave
SINE WAVES (y = sin x) are ubiquitous. They represent the behaviour of a simple oscillator. This animation illustrates the relationship between...PT32Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/f4b2af4f-cad3-414e-ae57-c18f6d76dcb7/SINE_COSINE_Graph_Paper_render_32s_265_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/f4b2af4f-cad3-414e-ae57-c18f6d76dcb7/SINE_COSINE_Graph_Paper_render_32s_265_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/f4b2af4f-cad3-414e-ae57-c18f6d76dcb7/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/f4b2af4f-cad3-414e-ae57-c18f6d76dcb7/price
RIGHT ANGLE MIRRORS Purple and Green Beams
Elastic balls are fired at a corner cube (three plane reflectors all at 90 degrees to each other). Each surface bounces the balls back in one axis. When the balls bounce off all three surfaces they travel back parallel to their original course. Light does the same thing with a corner-cube reflector, like those found in the red reflectors at the back of cars.
Animation ID: CORNER_CUBE_Red_and_Blue_Balls_265
Duration: 00:20
Animation resolution: 3840x2160 pixels @ 30.0 fps, ~20.2 Mbits/s
Animation keywords: beam, cars, cats eye, corner, cube, diagram, electromagnetic, incident ray, light, mirror, optical, optics, physics, ray, reflected, reflection, reflective, retroreflector
RIGHT ANGLE MIRRORS Purple and Green Beams2022-11-27T07:00:04ZElastic balls are fired at a corner cube (three plane reflectors all at 90 degrees to each other). Each surface bounces the balls back in one axis. When the balls bounce off all three surfaces they travel back parallel to their original course. Light d...PT20Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/f276b502-74ca-4efd-8f45-401f14354749/CORNER_CUBE_Red_and_Blue_Balls_265_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/f276b502-74ca-4efd-8f45-401f14354749/CORNER_CUBE_Red_and_Blue_Balls_265_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/f276b502-74ca-4efd-8f45-401f14354749/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/f276b502-74ca-4efd-8f45-401f14354749/price
Potential Energy Kinetic Energy Ball Rolls Down Slope Graphs1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00A ball rolls down a slope, losing potential energy (blue) and gaining kinetic energy (red). The amount of potential energy is directly proportional to the height of the ball, and what it loses in potential energy it gains in kinetic (note the two tria...PT16Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/9eebad1c-9681-498d-b50d-a088cbff0a0a/POTENTIAL_KINETIC_Energy_Graph_Triangles_265_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/9eebad1c-9681-498d-b50d-a088cbff0a0a/POTENTIAL_KINETIC_Energy_Graph_Triangles_265_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/9eebad1c-9681-498d-b50d-a088cbff0a0a/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/9eebad1c-9681-498d-b50d-a088cbff0a0a/price