Yes heat can pass through wood.
coz wood is an insulator, where there's no free electrons n thus current pass through the wood :)
Yes i guess sound waves travel faster through wood than in water. Because molecules are tightly packed in wood(solid) than in water(liquid).
A piece of wood is not considered electromagnetic energy. Electromagnetic energy refers to the energy carried by electromagnetic waves, such as light, radio waves, and X-rays. Wood does not emit or interact with electromagnetic waves in the same way that energy does.
The wood will cast a shadow, as the light can not pass through wood.
Wood does not conduct the radio waves. Metal does.
Yes heat can pass through wood.
Depends on frequency"Electromagnetic flux" is just the amount of energy passing through a surface in the form of electromagnetic waves.The answer to your question depends on the frequency of the electromagnetic waves. Long, slow waves like radio waves can pass through wood, and short, fast waves like X-rays and gamma rays can also. Intermediate waves like visible light cannot (in other words, you can't see through wood).Good answer. If you should be talking about whether wood will decrease the flux produced by a magnet, the answer is no. The flux flows through wood just fine, but it does not interact with the wood. If the flux was passing through a conductor, then it could induce a current, thereby losing energy of it's own.Please be more preciseDo you mean the electric flux, or the magnetic flux, or the flow of electromagnetic waves?
Attenuation Coefficientof the material. How much power travels through a dielectric depends onboth the thickness of the material and its attenuation coefficient.Dielectrics such as cardboard, paper, clear glass, Teflon, some plastics,pure water and many building materials have low attenuation coefficientsand radio waves reflect from them and also easily pass through them.Example: You can receive radio waves in most houses made of brick, wood,plaster, wall board, cement etc.. Buildings made of metal or metal coatedglasses, or steel reinforced concrete, reflect most of the radio energyand you cannot receive radio signals inside of them.
coz wood is an insulator, where there's no free electrons n thus current pass through the wood :)
Yes i guess sound waves travel faster through wood than in water. Because molecules are tightly packed in wood(solid) than in water(liquid).
yes
yes it can
Yes i guess sound waves travel faster through wood than in water. Because molecules are tightly packed in wood(solid) than in water(liquid).
Sound waves need matter to travel through, and wood is matter, so yes, sound waves travel through wood. They travel through wood faster than they do through air, as wood is denser than air.
A piece of wood is not considered electromagnetic energy. Electromagnetic energy refers to the energy carried by electromagnetic waves, such as light, radio waves, and X-rays. Wood does not emit or interact with electromagnetic waves in the same way that energy does.
You would say that the wood is opaque.