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1-2mm This question was answered by my forensics science teacher.
They are called impressed prints. You can read more about them at the below link:
is a chemical that makes the latent image on the film or print visible. It does this by reducing the silver halides that have been exposed to light to elemental silver in the gelatine matrix. As a generalisation, the longer a developer is allowed to work, the greater the degree of reduction of the silver halide crystals to silver and therefore the darker the negative image.
Print density is how dark or light your printer prints your document. The darker it is, the more ink it uses.
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Latent Print
I saw a latent finger print after dusting for it.
Another term for partial print is latent.
Commonly referred to as a "latent."
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Yes, it is a type of forensic science
Another term for partial print is latent.
A guarded yes. It depends on what made the fingerprint. Heavy grease or superglue is more likely to leave a print on a wet, smooth surface than a print from finger soaked in liquid detergent. Simple body oils would still be possible if the rain was slight, of short duration, the surface was previously very clean, etc. However, latent fingerprints exposed to flowing water over a long period of time tend to be much harder to recover.
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The photograph of the latent print should be transmitted to a central office where it can processed by comparing it with existing known fingerprints in order to identify the person responsible for the latent prints
specializes in collecting fingerprints etc from a crime scene or a criminal.