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Dictionary
be reflected from
verb
To bend back (light, etc.) from a surface.
Exact(37)
My learning attainment could not only be reflected from my gaming score but also from my reflective blogging …… the process of blogging helped me clear up many misconceptions and reinforced my knowledge about Agriculture.
Under normal ionospheric conditions 40 MHz is the highest-frequency radio wave that can be reflected from the ionosphere.
The shadow of the observer's head encompasses the precise 180° line, and therefore no light can be reflected from this direction.
Hence, radio waves cannot then be reflected from it but pass through to the strongly reflecting E and F layers above.
Depending on the energy of the electron, it will either be reflected from the buckyball (thus, the transistor is "off") or it will hop across to the other electrode (the transistor is "on," allowing current to flow).
It works because infra-red light, which has a longer wavelength than visible light, can penetrate the paint on the surface but can nevertheless be reflected from underdrawings that have been covered by later brush strokes.
Similar(23)
This means that for two equiluminant SPDs, the one with the greater saturation is likely to have been reflected from a surface with greater reflectance than the other.
These effects are due to waves travelling out from the coupling being reflected from other parts of the structure, these reflections being later incident upon the coupling.
An understanding of fundamentals of remote sensing, especially how light is reflected from various surfaces and what affects this reflection, is critical.
The reflectivity data quantifies the amount of light that is reflected from a point in the scene back to the laser scanner.
Typically, when light is reflected from different surfaces, any light that comes off the path of that reflection becomes polarized.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com