Physics, asked by Tanveertk1261, 1 day ago

Give Reason-Aeroplanes do not cast shadows

Answers

Answered by palneeta1984
0

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Flying birds and airplanes don't cast a shadow on the ground because they are too small and too far away from the ground to cast a prominent, observable shadow… but that's not the whole story

Explanation:

Like anything that is not completely see-through, the water vapour from jet planes, called jet contrails (NOT chemtrails), can cast shadows. ... [They may seem to be cast] by a low altitude bright light shining upwards and casting the contrail shadow on a higher cloud.

Viewed from the ground, an object can cast a shadow if it blocks the Sun. At a sufficient height, an airplane crossing in front of the sun would appear too small to block the sun completely, and so it will not cast a dark shadow. You can easily see the shadow of an airplane on clouds, when the distance is less.

We can only see their shadow on the ground if they are flying very close to the ground.

The distance between the high plane and the ground is much larger than the distance between the ow plane and the ground. This causes the shadow of the higher plane to be nothing. The light though blocked at that height, can still reach the ground, with slanted light paths.

Answered by sathyadevaki4
0

Answer:

because aeroplanes are fly in the sky there is a huge distance between the aeroplane and the ground so we did not see the shadow

Explanation:

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