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Author Topic: Chemicals used to create imagery, science simple?  (Read 355 times)
Munny_
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« on: May 29, 2011, 01:17:53 PM »

For the academic this is a extremely easy concept. Of which I am not academic and so I'm asking rather than telling. And could be used to create the illusion of a holographic figure. Or is that a little too ambitious and misguided? Peace.

Couldn't you just take a bunch of X Y Z substances, clusters, charge the surface with some sort of friction and create solid parts of the image? Some sort of dust? Cluster A, Cluster B, Cluster C....come together within their clusters, creating chemical reactions/ bonds, whatever it would be, that cluster becomes a color.

Again, I know nothing, but you don't have to be rude. Thanks.
The friction joining of different cluster "orbs" , particles, whatever to create a mass of color, that could be in any shape and arrangement and the joining it to another cluster .
Thanks for sharing my friend!
Sure, why not. thank you. I looked at photographic processing , and saw that chemicals do and do not relate to numerous photographic processes. Cheesy
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defiant
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« Reply #1 on: May 29, 2011, 03:28:17 PM »

NO.


Research "photography" for real image development.
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David_D
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« Reply #2 on: May 29, 2011, 04:13:33 PM »

When you create a photographic hologram you are using light to expose a photographic plate so that a chemical reaction can cause "clumps" of silver to form...

These clumps of silver diffract light and create the holographic image...
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