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Materials that allow energy to flow easily through it are called conductors.
Depends on what type of energy, but usually they are called conductors.
mettel
Conduction
A thermal conductor.
A conductor is any material that allows an electric current to pass through easily and an insulator is a material that stops or slows energy
Materials that allow energy to flow easily through it are called conductors.
consendation
Depends on what type of energy, but usually they are called conductors.
A material that allows energy to flow through it is called a conductor. Conductors typically have loosely bound electrons that can easily move in response to an external electric field, facilitating the flow of energy (electricity) through the material. Some examples of conductors include metals like copper and aluminum.
A conductor is a material that can transfer energy efficiently and and insulator is the opposite.Conductor means something that blocks it and insulator means something that can go through itA conductor easily transfers energy in the form of electricity and/or heat, while an insulator does not easily transfer these types of energy.In electricity, a conductor is a material that can let current pass through and an insulator does not let current pass through,or rather copper is a conductor and plastic is an insulator.A insulator is something that will not allowheat/electricity to pass through it and a conductor is something that allows heat/electricity to pass through it.
mettel
An insulator is a material through which some kind of energy - usually electricity, or heat, or sound - does not easily pass.
Conduction
Energy from the sun is what allows plants to make their own energy through photosynthesis.
In order for a material to be transparent (see-through), the light energy that impacts the material must be transmitted through the material and "released" on the other side unchanged. In order for this to happen, the molecules of the material must vibrate at the frequency of the light energy in such a way that the energy is not changed into another form - ie. the energy is not absorbed and used to heat the material, nor is the energy reflected off the surface. Opaque materials' molecules keep the energy or reflect it back, but don't pass it through.
Any material which has high thermal conductivity can easily transfer energy as heat. As far as I know, all metals have high thermal conductivity. Copper, gold and silver especially have high thermal conductivity. Diamond and graphene have VERY high thermal conductivity, so this is not restricted to only metals.