Is this the answer to harry potters invisibility cloak?
Perhaps it's what stealth planes are made of.
An investigation I think should be carried out.
Answers on a post card. Or below, you choose.
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Is this the answer to harry potters invisibility cloak?
Perhaps it's what stealth planes are made of.
An investigation I think should be carried out.
Answers on a post card. Or below, you choose.
All chameleon species are able to change their skin color. Changing color is an expression of the physical and physiological condition of the lizard.[5] The color also plays a part in communication.
Different chameleon species are able to change different colors which can include pink, blue, red, orange, green, black, brown and yellow. [6][7] Chameleons are naturally coloured for their surroundings as a camouflage. However, recent research has indicated that Chameleons may use colour changes as a method of communication, including to make themselves more attractive to potential mates.[8]
Chameleons have specialized cells, collectively called chromatophores, that lie in layers under their transparent outer skin. The cells in the upper layer, called xanthophores and erythrophores, contain yellow and red pigments respectively. Below these is another layer of cells called iridophores or guanophores, and they contain the colourless crystalline substance guanine. These reflect, among others, the blue part of incident light. If the upper layer of chromatophores appears mainly yellow, the reflected light becomes green (blue plus yellow). A layer of dark melanin containing melanophores is situated even deeper under the reflective iridophores. The melanophores influence the 'lightness' of the reflected light. All these pigment cells can rapidly relocate their pigments, thereby influencing the colour of the chameleon.
it would blend in with whatever the mirror is reflecting.
I just raped your paradox. Next...
yeah but what would the mirror be reflecting? the mirror would be reflecting the chameleon so it would blend into itself
"Putting a chameleon on a mirror seemed a simple enough experiment that I thought that even a writer could perform it. So I did. I built a small, mirrored box, and I bought a color-changing lizard and placed it inside. Although Brand's riddle had been around for 20 years, this was the first time, as far as I know, anyone had actually tried it.
On the mirror the lizard stabilized at one color of green -- the green of young leaves on trees in the spring -- and returned to that one color each time I tried the experiment. But it would spend periods being brown before returning to green. Its resting color in the box was not the same dark brown it seemed to like when out of the mirrored box"
but IMO that guys bs, i think it would turn into a chamillionaire.
You're all retarted...
no I'm not even going to explain.
seems like the only plausable answer so far,