Comment by michaelmrose
12 hours ago
No because the amount of illumination is dwarfed by the amount that must bounce on off from more normal sources for us to be aware of things.
12 hours ago
No because the amount of illumination is dwarfed by the amount that must bounce on off from more normal sources for us to be aware of things.
I don't believe that, our senses are extremely (extreeeemeeeelyyy to the absolute extreme) sensitive. Our nose can detect single molecules and their chirality, our eyes can detect single photons under some conditions. We might be able to detect quantum phenomena as well ...
Are you suggesting this light is of lower intensity than what a single photon puts out? Explain your reasoning.