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Yes. My uncle devised a hand held spectrophotometer to allow blind people to select appropriate items for their wardrobe. AFAIK it is still in production.
In experiment I positioned a satellite dish pointing towards a blue background, my monitor did not detect 450nm ,why is this?
Quote from: DarkKnight on 06/12/2022 14:23:40In experiment I positioned a satellite dish pointing towards a blue background, my monitor did not detect 450nm ,why is this?What did it detect? I mean, blue is a lot more frequencies than just 450 nm.You can't for instance point it at a picture of a banana on your TV and expect the device to actually detect yellow light coming from it. TV screens don't work that way.
Quote from: DarkKnight on 06/12/2022 14:23:40In experiment I positioned a satellite dish pointing towards a blue background, my monitor did not detect 450nm ,why is this?Why do you think your satellite dish and electronics would be able to detect and display a blue color on your monitor?
I positioned an orbiting satellite and emitted a 450nm carrier signal.
Quote from: DarkKnight on 06/12/2022 14:44:11I positioned an orbiting satellite and emitted a 450nm carrier signal. How?
Hi. As outlined by @Bored chemist, the ability to move satellites (satellites in space?) does seem impressive. This is a bit more than a home experiment isn't it? As regards the sky, the modern explanation for why it looks blue is Rayleigh scattering. This means that it isn't really just blue, it's just less red when you observe from the surface of the earth. As @Halc suggested much earlier, you might be receiving a wide spectrum of wavelengths and the sky is then mainly white - a mixture of many wavelengths. I don't know how your receiver works when picking up a spectrum of wavelengths. For example does it perform a Fourier Analysis to pick out individual sinusoidal frequencies and how well does it do this? For a wide mixture of wavelengths the average displacement of the E field at the satellite dish is always going to be close to 0.Best Wishes.(A new post was reported before I finished writing this, sorry). I've just read that - I'm not sure what it was you were doing. Perhaps you could explain a bit more.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 06/12/2022 14:47:54Quote from: DarkKnight on 06/12/2022 14:44:11I positioned an orbiting satellite and emitted a 450nm carrier signal. How?I took out my video camera and live streamed a blue background , how else?
the monitor displays white noise
And when you aim your camera at a blue source you are then sending a carrier at maybe ~0.05m MODULATED with your 450nm signal-you are not sending a carrier at 450nm.
If you point your camera at a blank blue wall, your movie camera's electronics examine the pixels and categorise them as "a lot of blue, a bit of green and hardly any red; this is spread uniformly across the wall (not a gradient); and it's not moving over time". (That's my verbal description of MPEG encoding; other video encodings are available...)- You transmit this to a TV screen (optionally via a satellite), and the TV electronics decodes this as "a lot of blue, a bit of green and hardly any red; this is spread uniformly across the wall (not a gradient); and it's not moving over time".