light hahahahha
Three materials that reflect light are glass, any shiny surface, and concrete.
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.
transparent, translucent, and opaque. All 'materials' (i.e. made of matter) interact with em wave energy (which includes light). Humans can detect some but not all of those interactions.
Does heat affect all kinds of material in the same way?why?(Solid,,Liquid,Gas)
The three kinds of Melodic Directions are Ascending, Descending and Repeated.I hope this answers your question!! :)
Three materials that reflect light are glass, any shiny surface, and concrete.
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IF you use LIGHT response as a measure of different kinds of material, there are only THREE types Opaque = Light cannot penetrate, or bounce from the material well. Variations on this include only certain KINDS of light can penetrate it. IE UV glass that passes Optical light, forbids UV light. Translucent = Allows the majority of light to pass through. glass is the obvious example, and cloudiness or coloration is the obvious exception. Refractive = Any material that allows SOME light to pass through, but alters it's direction, often in different responses to the FREQUENCY of the light it encounters. OF COURSE, many materials exhibit all three properties to some degree
Oxygen, carbon dioxide, and food
Library's have a wide variety of materials that are useful to the public. Three of these materials are books, history material, and encyclopedias.
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.
There are many types of materials engineers use to build walls. Three possible construction materials are wood, brick, and concrete.
White light: makes up the rainbow Ultraviolet light: the beams that come from the sun along with Infared light
Gravel, organic matter, sand.
The type of light, the distance it has to travel and the substance that it passes through.
Transparent materials allow light to pass through, Opaque objects completely stop the passage of light, Reflecting surfaces will reflect the light, and translucent objects allow the light to pass, but in a diffuse manner.
transparent, translucent, and opaque. All 'materials' (i.e. made of matter) interact with em wave energy (which includes light). Humans can detect some but not all of those interactions.