Yeah of course . Only if the voltage is above some 30,000 or like that .
Yes, but only if the flash unit or camera body is cracked, or the insulation defective. The strobe discharge from the capacitor would ordinarily be a harmless shock.
Yes, electrical current
Yes.
meteor ^v^
Well, the path in which the visible portion of lightning takes is plasma. But plasma is a gas. An ionized gas. So the flash of light you see is static electricity from the clouds jumping through that ionized gas (plasma) to the earth.I have a master's in EE. I'm creatable. :)
A giant spark that flashes across the sky. Each bolt zigzags through the air at many thousand of miles (kilometers) a second! Its electrical charge of about 100 million volts would be enough to light a small town for a whole year! The charge comes from tiny drops of water or ice that bump and rub within huge, towering cumulonimbus clouds. When the charge gets big enough, it creates the lightning. Bolts jump between the cloud and the ground or between two clouds.
it is light
bromine is a chemical element that has reaction with light. we use camera lens to reflect a picture of the scene we want to capture, the reflected picture we put it on the film with absence of any other light the only light we want to place to the film is the reflected light from the scene on front of camera, lenses reduces picture to be like the films size, finally when the reflected light take it's position on the film for a moment, the picture is printed to the film, the camera closes the port which makes the light enter to the film
YEs it is a good conductor of electricity
lightning camera flash passing car flash light fireworks
No. As long as you didn't go through the light and the intersection.
the Sony 200 camera would be a good camera in any light. This camera has four different flash modes so you would be able to adjust the flash for whatever light you in.
Camera flash stuns animals because they are not used to that bright of a light. They are also surprised when you take a picture at them with flash because they don't really know what a camera is.
Getting a Nikon 124res Camera flash will give you great light in very dark settings.
Passlock not working properly.
An imaging radar works very like a flash camera in that it provides its own light to illuminate an area on the ground and take a snapshot picture, but at radio wavelengths. A flash camera sends out a pulse of light (the flash) and records on film the light that is reflected back at it through the camera lens. Instead of a camera lens and film, a radar uses an antenna and digital computer tapes to record its images. In a radar image, one can see only the light that was reflected back towards the radar antenna.
Things that you are photographing reflect it.
If the flash is pointing in the same direction as where the camera is pointed, there will be no shadows as any shadows are dispersed by the light from the flash.
The beam of a flashlight (also known as a torch) is the cone where the light shines. A camera flash is a device that emits a brief intense pulse of light which can help to take a picture, particularly in poor light.
Yes. Most modern cameras use a xenon arc flash lamp.