yes
Visual pollution
Visual pollution occurs when you can see either physical damage to the environment, or pollution in the form of smog, litter, sludge, etc.
The solution for visual pollution is to do your part to clean it up. Do not wait for governments or your neighbor to clean up the pollution for you. If you cannot legally clean up a particular pollution, then you can create awareness with websites, videos and such to make other humans embarrassed to continue their filthy polluting habits. There are personal devices and equipments to clean up air pollution and water pollution, so if each person obtains an anti-pollution device and/or picks up trash from the walkways and/or waterways, then there will be no more visual pollution. The important thing is to not wait for someone else to clean up the visual pollution you see... waiting is not the answer.
Yes it does.
visual pollution
it doesnt
Because of its photovoltaic and photoconductive properties, selenium is used in photocopying, photocells, light meters and solar cells. Its use as a photoconductor in plain-paper copiers once was a leading application but in the 1980s, the photoconductor application declined (although it was still a large end-use) as more and more copiers switched to the use of organic photoconductors. It was once widely used in selenium rectifiers.
Trains. That is all
water that is polluted can soak into soil causing the soil to be polluted
Factors that affect the environment include, but are not limited to, toxic pollution, visual pollution, noise pollution, and traffic congestion.
A CCD is a group of photocells. Photocells are cells that react to a broad range of light rays. CCD's convert light into an electric charge.
Cesium is commonly used in atomic clocks due to its high accuracy in timekeeping. Photocells often use silicon as the element at their core due to its semiconducting properties, which allow it to efficiently convert light into electricity.