Are you guys familiar with Dialux 4 or Dialux Evo ?
In the first frames at low height, on the left hand image, what are those four pinkish circles in the center?
I like. Why did
@wietefras like yours and not mine? Yours has the yellow and green he was complaining about. If he wrote one with reflecance in a few hours, he should be able to write this on an hour. Do you believe he can do this in a few hours? I'm calling bullshit. He says I'm clueless. I actually laughed out load when I type that.
@wietefras not only doesn't know. He does not know he doesn't know.
Lol, because you have no clue how to calculate it, it must be impossible? Pffft.
Well I did it and I'd love to see that Nobel prize coming my way. But I doubt they give those away for something any self respecting programmer could whip out in a few hours.
Key phrase:
SELF respecting programmer.
Show us your equations for reflectance. I'd give a metal to you just for that. I cannot help you to find a chest to pin it on.
I'm especially interested in the reflections in the corners.
CORNER REFLECTOR:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corner_reflector
This is good: "because you have no clue how to calculate it, it must be impossible?"
Photons are a particle. They just bounce off the walls at the same angle they hit. Correct? Angle of reflectance matches the incident angle? Correct?
Not exactly. That's a model created from experimental results. It's not the way photons actually work.
I think it's impossible? I said it would probably take more years than I have left on this planet to include reflections.
Impossible for you? ABSOLUTELY!!!
Richard Feynman an American
theoretical physicist known for his work in the
path integral formulation of
quantum mechanics, the theory of
quantum electrodynamics, and the physics of the
superfluidity of supercooled
liquid helium, as well as in
particle physics for which he proposed the
parton model.
For his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman, jointly with
Julian Schwinger and
Shin'ichirō Tomonaga,
received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965.
In his lecture on reflectance Richard Feynman said:
While partial reflection by a single surface is a deep mystery and a difficult problem, partial reflection by two or more surfaces is absolutely mind-boggling
And he is referring to a simplified monochromatic light source.
You wrote a reflectance app in a few hours
. Put it up! Nobel Prize time.
So how do photons reflect???
This is how Feynman says they do (the second image). The first image, I am sure, is how
@wietefras views reflectance. Even using the classic model till I do not believe he could ever write a refectance app for a tent that actually worked
Okay wietefras he says you are a classic.
Just like the Wizard of Oz is a classic.
In his lecture (which is for non-technical general public) he uses an analogy of a teh hand on a stop watch. When the photon hits the detector the hand stops. The direction of the hand is the direction the photon is inclined to go.
He may not say, but the stopwatch I believe is the energy oscillations of the photon. Each wavelength, or more meaningful, frequency (inverse of wavelength), the oscillations are at different frequencies adding to the complexity. The oscillation frequency determines the amount of energy the photon carries.
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Since there are 602,214,085,700,000,000,000 photons in a µMole, how many will hit the 4 corners of the tent? At how many different angles. At how many unique points? Sounds infinite. Overwhelming. But I'm clueless. What do I know?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corner_reflector
Feynman also said:
This strange phenomenon of partial reflection by two surfaces can be explained for intense light by a theory of waves, but the wave theory cannot explain how the detector makes equally loud clicks as the light gets dimmer. Quantum electrodynamics “resolves” this wave-particle duality by saying that light is made of particles (as Newton originally thought), but the price of this great advancement of science is a retreat by physics to the position of being able to calculate only the probability that a photon will hit a detector, without offering a good model of how it actually happens.
So photons are a particle.
Do you realize they are a subatomic particles?
Do you realize they are massless energy?
Do they bounce off a reflective surface?
What makes a surface reflective? Because reflective surfaces are shinny like a mirror?
What happens when a photon collides with an electron?
What happens when a photon collides with another photon?
When photons are reflected, is there a higher probability they will collide with the non-reflected photons?
When the reflectance of a thin film sputtered with aluminum is measured do they use a beam or wave to measure?
How does the refractive index of mylar affect the reflection from a coated piece of mylar?
How deep does a photon penetrate the surface?
If the coating is spherical particles of aluminum is it still a specular reflection, or diffused?
How does the wavelength of a photon affect reflectance?
What is the wavelength?
Why does wavelength affect the energy level?
Is it impossible??? Me I go with the impossible is only impossible until the impossible has been done.
Dr. Feynnam does not agree. But he's no wizard. Can't wait for Mr Wizard aka Wietefras to post his Nobel prize winning app here. Or is wietefras just full of _it?
.
Knowing the three fundamental actions is only a very small beginning toward analyzing any real situation, where there is such a multitude of photon exchanges going on that it is impossible to calculate—experience has to be gained as to which possibilities are more important.
Richard Feynman QED Lecture 2, Reflection and Transmission