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  2. Color temperature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_temperature

    The temperature of the ideal emitter that matches the color most closely is defined as the color temperature of the original visible light source. The color temperature scale describes only the color of light emitted by a light source, which may actually be at a different (and often much lower) temperature. [1] [2]

  3. Gravitational redshift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_redshift

    The effect of gravity on light was then explored by Johann Georg von Soldner (1801), who calculated the amount of deflection of a light ray by the Sun, arriving at the Newtonian answer which is half the value predicted by general relativity. All of this early work assumed that light could slow down and fall, which is inconsistent with the ...

  4. Crookes radiometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crookes_radiometer

    If light pressure were the cause of the rotation, then the better the vacuum in the bulb, the less air resistance to movement, and the faster the vanes should spin. In 1901, with a better vacuum pump, Pyotr Lebedev showed that in fact, the radiometer only works when there is low-pressure gas in the bulb, and the vanes stay motionless in a hard ...

  5. Thermal radiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_radiation

    A kitchen oven, at a temperature about double room temperature on the absolute temperature scale (600 K vs. 300 K) radiates 16 times as much power per unit area. An object at the temperature of the filament in an incandescent light bulb—roughly 3000 K, or 10 times room temperature—radiates 10,000 times as much energy per unit area.

  6. Speed of gravity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_gravity

    The speed of gravitational waves in the general theory of relativity is equal to the speed of light in vacuum, c. [3] Within the theory of special relativity, the constant c is not only about light; instead it is the highest possible speed for any interaction in nature.

  7. Gravitational lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_lens

    In general relativity, light follows the curvature of spacetime, hence when light passes around a massive object, it is bent. This means that the light from an object on the other side will be bent towards an observer's eye, just like an ordinary lens. In general relativity the path of light depends on the shape of space (i.e. the metric).

  8. Gravitational time dilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_time_dilation

    Gravitational time dilation is closely related to gravitational redshift, [4] in which the closer a body emitting light of constant frequency is to a gravitating body, the more its time is slowed by gravitational time dilation, and the lower (more "redshifted") would seem to be the frequency of the emitted light, as measured by a fixed observer.

  9. Galileo thermometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galileo_thermometer

    The metal tags on each bulb are stamped with a temperature. If a bulb is in the centre of the column, that gives a close approximation of the environment temperature outside the tube. If there are some at the top and some at the base but none in between the average of the lowest bulb at the top and the highest at the base provides that figure.