I was reading Digital signal processing and there I came across the term 'aliasing'. The author wrote aliasing is not always a pitfall to avoid, but there are applications that exploit it too. The stroboscope is one for example. Then I came to youtube to search what stroboscope is, and amazingly I understood what the author meant. Thanks for this great explanation.
pEnd = [C15: from L pendere (italic) to hang] page 869. pOnd = a pOOl of still water, Often artificially created. [C13: pOnde (italic) enclOsure] page 912.
Intensity = ? Ke-amat-an ? (Exact word) To-na (for light observed by naked eyes. Colour from reflected light fr. chemistry compound is different from colour that comes fr. electrified liquid crystal) Our eyes love x, prefer x, etc. Up to you. Good videoclip. Terima kasih.
Electron moving, generate 'untouchable' magnetic field that creates F. F = force That is proportional with P. Ok Force resulted fr. magnetic field has vector. Ki-ri, ka-nan, ha-da-pan, be-la-kang... In direction a b c d z I mean not just x, y, z like we use to draw on paper (2D) or other people 'draw' (>2D)
Seems to me if you halved the frequency you'd get a flash every six rotations, so you would still see the same one line. If you doubled it you would have two lines opposite since you would have one flash at the beginning and then another half way through the second rotation
@@johnjordan3552 My bad. This comment was unintentional, I had 3 tabs opened at the time and probably commented in the wrong one. I'll delete this comment