-- empty space
-- air
-- clean water
-- glass that's not too heavily tinted
-- thin smoke
-- fog
-- alcohol
-- kleenex
-- wax
-- thin cloth like lace or see-through blouse
-- fingernail
-- colorless hair
-- gasoline
-- kerosene
-- party balloon
-- oxygen
-- carbon monoxide
-- carbon dioxide
-- many plastics
-- jello
-- thin chicken soup
-- ice
-- quartz
-- diamond
-- toilet paper
-- garlic skin
-- thin mica
Transparent materials allow light to freely pass through them. Translucent materials also allow light to pass through them, but change the colour of the light.
Opaque materials do not allow light to pass through them.
opaque
opaque
Opaque.
Transparent materials will always allow light to pass through, translucent materials will allow light to pass through as well but the light rays will be scattered. Opaque materials will not allow any light to pass through.
Transparent materials allow light to freely pass through them. Translucent materials also allow light to pass through them, but change the colour of the light.
Opaque materials do not allow light to pass through them.
Translucent materials allow some light to pass through. Transparent materials allow most or all light to pass through.
They reflect or absorb light and thus do not allow light to pass through.
light
opaque
opaque
Opaque.
Glass
Materials are classified into three catagories firstly opaque through which light can not pass,secondly transparent through which light can pass and lastly translucent through light light passes partially.
Translucent materials allows light to pass through it. Windows is a translucent material because it allows light to pass through it