Reality TV0 min ago
Wagon Wheel
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Presumably you are referring to the way they appear on TV and in films.
It is because of what is called an interference pattern between the spokes on the wheel and the frames of the film.
Imagine that there are 24 spokes in a wheel, and 24 frames in one second of film.
If the wheel is moving round at one rotation per second, then each spoke in the wheel will move forward to exactly the position where the spoke in front of it was in the previous frame (i.e. one twenty-fourth of a second ago). The film will make it look as though the spokes are standing still (because the spokes moving round the wheel match exactly with the frames of film going through the camera) (in other words, the film will make it look as though spoke 1 is where spoke 1 was previously, whereas in reality spoke 1 will be where spoke 2 was previously).
If the wheel is going slightly faster than one rotation per second, then each spoke will move forward to just beyond where the previous spoke was in the previous frame. The film will make it look as though the spokes are moving forwards slowly (in other words, the film will make it look as though spoke 1 is just beyond where spoke 1 was previously, whereas in reality spoke 1 will be just beyond where spoke 2 was previously).
If the wheel is going slightly slower than one rotation per second, then each spoke will move forward to just before where the previous spoke was in the previous frame. The film will make it look as though the spokes are moving backwards slowly (in other words, the film will make it look as though spoke 1 is just behind where spoke 1 was previously, whereas in reality spoke 1 will be just behind where spoke 2 was previously).
Look out for a film of a car or coach slowing down - it will look as though the spokes are going forwards; as the car slows down the spokes will appear to slow down and stop, and then go backwards. Then it will become a blur, and when the car becomes slow enough you will be able to see the spokes moving slowly as they really are.
How it appears on film all depends on how far the spokes move in between each frame. Sometimes you can see a wheel on a car which has got two separate sets of holes at different distances from the middle, in which one set of holes appear to go forwards and the other set appears to go backwards on the same wheel (!). This is because there are different numbers of holes in the circle, so they interfere with the frames of the film in adifferent way.
The same sort of interference patterns happen quite often in various types of physics - sound and light and colours and waves as well as film. For example, the colours you see on a film of oil or in a rainbow depend on the way the light interferes with itself after being reflected off the two surfaces of the liquid! If you do a google search on "interference patterns" you should be able to find loads of stuff all about it.