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Question:

When the two additive colors blue (475 nm) and green (510 nm) are incident in equal magnitudes upon a white?

When the two additive colors blue (475 nm) and green (510 nm) are incident in equal magnitudes upon a white screen, the subtractive color cyan results. Consider two beams, one blue and one green. The blue beam is shined through a double-slit diffraction grating with slit distance of 0.0400 mm and then displays an interference pattern on a screen 1.00m away. If the green beam is then shined from the same position as the blue beam, what size diffraction grating would be required for the green beam so only a cyan interference pattern would be seen on the screen?

Answer:

one answerno this will not cause a tie rod to break, nor will it put additional strain on the front of the car. they are full of **** and are looking to get more money out of you. they should of noticed the bad tie rod on the safty or vehicle inspection that every shop now days are required to do. if they did one and didnt mark anything down. law suits are fun in this situation.
Hi From a safety point of view they best tires should be on the rear. A blow out on the front , you still have a steering wheel to work with. On the rear , it is much harder to control the car. Try driving backwards fast and see how hard it is to control. And that is why they put two tires on larger trucks.
Definetly not, it will fail due to other problems such as being old, worn out, something hits it, etc. Tires won't do that. You could have quad wheels on the front and truck tires in the back and it will just rake the bottom of the car, maybe wipe out a little bit of the suspension, but not the tie rods.
B, This first part contradicts itself (additive colors b g .subtractive color cyan) Light beams will be additive only. Interesting light problem, but I'm not going to attempt to answer the size except to say that it seems to be a factor that is clearly related to the ratio of the two wavelengths. Good luck.

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