Screen filters are generally made of a (metal) mesh of some sort, their filtration grade is course, collecting large particles, typically a few millimetres (sometime perhaps 1/10th of a mm) in size or greater. Whilst paper filters are normally based on paper fibres combined together to form a very fine filter material, capable of filtering particles that are sub-micron (less than a 1/1000th of a mm) in size. Most HEPA filters for example are paper-based filters.
The screen filter can't seperate marbles from a liquid.
Three dimensional (3D) effects are seen when the left eye and right eye view a scene from slightly different angles. The brain can be fooled into seeing the same if each eye is shown a slightly different image. The two images are projected on a screen in complementary colours. Glasses with matching filters ensure that each eye only sees one image. Complementary pairs of colours include red and green, red and blue, blue and green, red and cyan, green and magenta or blue and yellow.
What is charmatograhy paper? Just kidding! I assume you mean chromatography paper. Well, the answer to your question lies in the solubility of the different colour dyes. The more soluble the dye the faster it will travel across the paper. Also, some substances react better with the paper but I'm not sure that is the right answer.
you can crumple up the paper
because they break up light :)
cause YES....
cause YES....
The screen filter can't seperate marbles from a liquid.
cause YES....
they are the different because they are not the same material
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they are the different because they are not the same material
one is made out of meadl one is made out of paper.Also paper can get wet and cimicals can tear it.
Screen filters and paper filters are alike
The screen filter let's more in or through. And the paper filter doesn't let almost anything in.
They can filter but in diffent ways
Screen filters are generally made of a (metal) mesh of some sort, their filtration grade is course, collecting large particles, typically a few millimetres (sometime perhaps 1/10th of a mm) in size or greater. Whilst paper filters are normally based on paper fibres combined together to form a very fine filter material, capable of filtering particles that are sub-micron (less than a 1/1000th of a mm) in size. Most HEPA filters for example are paper-based filters.