I was reading in first floor of my house where sunlight was directly falling on a plastic water bottles' surface and the image of the glowing surface was projected on wall opposite to that. The wonder was that this image would oscillate with even the faintest wave reaching to it. Like a speeding car at about 40-50 km speed par hr moved through 50 ft distance from the bottle created significant oscillation of the image. I think this type of machinery system can be employed in detecting very weak mechanical waves. And also it seems to be a very fine scale.
Easy Math Editor
This discussion board is a place to discuss our Daily Challenges and the math and science related to those challenges. Explanations are more than just a solution — they should explain the steps and thinking strategies that you used to obtain the solution. Comments should further the discussion of math and science.
When posting on Brilliant:
*italics*
or_italics_
**bold**
or__bold__
paragraph 1
paragraph 2
[example link](https://brilliant.org)
> This is a quote
\(
...\)
or\[
...\]
to ensure proper formatting.2 \times 3
2^{34}
a_{i-1}
\frac{2}{3}
\sqrt{2}
\sum_{i=1}^3
\sin \theta
\boxed{123}
Comments
There are no comments in this discussion.