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No wavelengths.
Studyisland: no wave uh it's orange light.
Toughened glass is transparent. It is translucent if frosted. To be opaque, it would need to be covered with something that won't let light through.
Refracted. Hope this helped.
It will do both.
Some of the light is reflected, some is absorbed by the glass, and the rest makes it all the way through and comes out of the other side. Since the glass is "frosted" or"ground", the light is scattered (bounces around) inside the glass, and doesn't follow a straight path. Although the light intensity and illumination survive the trip through it, images don't.
Frosted glass is translucent. It allows light through but scatters the light. This prevents anyone having a clear (transparent) view.
Light will diffuse when it passes through frosted glass.
No. Frosted glass and wax paper are translucent. They pss light but cannot be seen through.
Glass?
Blue light. That's why the glass is called blue.
frosted glass
A translucent object is something that you can see through, but not completely. When light hits a translucent object, the light is scattered, meaning only some of the light passed through. An opaque object (like metal or wood) allows no light to pass through, and a transparent object (like glass or air) allows all or most light to pass.
No wavelenth.
No wavelengths.
Studyisland: no wave uh it's orange light.
Different types of information are transmitted from one place to another by signals of light pulses through optical fibers.