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speed of light |
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speed of lightSpeed at which light and other electromagnetic waves travel in a vacuum. Its value is 299,792,458 m per second/186,282 mi per second but for most calculations 3 × 108 m s−1 (300 million metres per second) suffices. In glass the speed of light is two-thirds of its speed in air, about 200 million metres per second. The speed of light is the highest speed possible, according to the theory of relativity, and its value is independent of the motion of its source and of the observer. It is impossible to accelerate any material body to this speed because it would require an infinite amount of energy. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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A light barrier sends a signal to the first robot when a sand core is present. A light barrier that determines whether or not any crop is exiting the discharge chute of the forage harvester generates an additional input signal used in the calculation of the crop throughput. For example, they can permit downgauging an outer white layer over the light barrier, using a monolayer structure, or eliminating foil. |
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