Im thinking of starting a small lawn mowing company maybe spend a few grand on decent equipment , anyone in the business?
yeah, it happens to me, too. don't know exactly why. unless it's just cause they're so sensitive, and when changing altitudes so quickly, things just move quickly down there. it's actually not an unpleasant feeling. just really, really different.
Roads around Crater Lake may be closed, as well as those near Mount Ranier and Mount St. Helens. Visit the highway patrol website of each state to find out about closures. I'd take I-5, as it is faster, and gets you closer to the first destination, Crater Lake. Take it to SR 62 north to Crater Lake National Park. Leave Crater Lake to the east on SR 138, and travel north on US 97 to US 26 to Mt. Hood. From Mt. Hood, take SR 35 to the Columbia River, and go west on I-84 along the Columbia River Gorge to Portland. From Portland, take I-5 north to SR 504 east to Mt. St. Helens. This will put you at the Johnson Visitor Center. You can get a view of the mountain and skip the visitor center by going on SR 503. This makes it a shorter drive to Mt. Rainier, continuing on 503 to SR 131 north to US 12. Or you can double-back on SR 504 to I-5 and from I-5, take US 12 east to SR 123 to Mt. Rainier. Take SR 123 to SR 410 to SR 164 to I-5 to get to Seattle, where you'll find Pike Place Market and the Space Needle. From Seattle, take I-90 to Snoqualmie Falls and continue down I-90 to SR 970 north, which will put you on US 97 north. Take that until it merges with US 2 east, and continue north on US 97 to Lake Chelan. This covers all your points. That's a lot of driving. I'd definitely check out an Oregon and Washington highway map to make sure I've given you the shortest routes. And check for closures as some of these roads may already be shut down for winter.
So i guess your asking if you pulse a light (or laser) in a hollow sphere with a reflective inner coating would the light remain there bouncing around forever? No it will not. Because like the other guy said the coatings are not ideal and there will always be some loss associated with the reflection.
I think it might have something to do with air pressure. Though it could also be the adrenalin or something. And that part of the body is(i think we all know) pretty sensitive to begin with so even a small change might cause a tingling sensation.