Ya, cuz 1 time in Star Trek they had transparent aluminum. For some whales and junk and its totally based on actual events that will take place in the future probably.
No. It is opaque
They're usually transparent.
Gold is a ductile metal means that gold metal possesses the capability of being drawn into wires. A 10gm piece of gold can be drawn into 2km wire. Not only this, gold is the most malleable metal which means that it could be beaten into thin sheets. A gold piece can be beaten into a a sheet which is transparent.
An antonym for transparent is "Dark".
There is no hex color code for a transparent or colorless color because there is no such color as transparent. Transparent is whatever color the backdrop is. Thus, there is an almost indefinite number of colors that could be considered feasibly transparent... but are not transparent. In other words, there needs to be a "transparent" option to switch any electronic color code setting to transparent.
If it was originally non-transparent, and then changed to transparent, then yes.
Gold is a precious metal and is opaque (not transparent).
Cobalt (metal) is not transparent. In other words, you can't see through it.
If it is made of glass, yes. If it is made of wood, metal, plastic, or stone then no, it is opaque.
Yes because you can't see through it. If it was transparent then you would be able to see through it. :)
The transparency of tungsten is that its Opaque. its a metal, so it is not at all transparent.
The opposite word of opaque is transparent. Opaque = an object that cannot be seen through, for example: solid metal door. Transparent = and object that can be seen through, for example: clear glass window.
Transparent
A kennel!
I have assumed you mean transparency to light. Metals are usually considered to be opaque. However very thin films are transparent, gold for example can be made thin enough to be translucent and even transparent, wikipedia says everything looks a greenish blue through it. There are some sensational reports of transparent sodium- which has been found at extreme high pressure (where sodium loses its metallic properties) Also of an irradiated form of alumiium which is transparent but only to high frequency ultra violet If you mean X-Ray - the denser the metal the more it absorbs.
Transparent
Yes, mirror is of usually of glass. The transparent glass is there to support an extremly thin metal foil which reflects light. The metal foil is painted at the back to prevent it from being scratched. Mirrors can be of pure metal to or in nature of water!
Diamond is transparent to non-transparent, depending on the diamond.