I imagine an electromagnetic wave as the propagation of electric and magnetic fields.
Consequently the amplitude of the field vectors are time-dependent. I also know that the intensity is proportional to the square of the electric field vector. Does this mean that light when it hits a screen is actually flickering? That the frequency is just way too high, so that we can't see it? Unfortunately I am not yet familiar with the Poynting-Vector, so I couldn't completely follow the derivation.
I also read that one usually calculates the time-averaged intensity. This really seems to imply that my idea is correct. Is it?
Thanks in advance for your help.