The opaque candleholder allows some light to pass through and reach your eyes, enabling you to see it. Your eyes receive the light that is reflected off the surface of the candleholder, which is then processed by your brain to form an image of the object.
no you cant see through itEdit (Wolf5370): Erm, the definition of opaque is that you can't see through it! So, yes a CD is mostly opaque (though the edges where ther film does nor reach is usually transparent - see through).
if you mean opaque, it is a translucent colour that you cannot really see through, as an example a pearl would be opaque
With ur eyes : Well, yes, but.. Ok, to be a little more specific, you see opaque objects the same way you see any other object. Photons of light reflect off of the object in question, back to your retinas in the back of your eyes. They then activate the optic nerves using rod and cone cells to interpret black and white and color as well as the details of the object. These impulses then travel through the optic nerves to the optic lobe of your brain, which is located in the back of the brain. Neurotransmitters in the brain cells then give you an instant interpretation of what you are seeing in your conscious brain.
We need an source of light, an opaque object blocking the path of light, a screen behind the opaque object.
No, they are not. An opaque object lets no light through at all. Marble counter tops, pieces of plywood or wallboard, sheet metals are examples of things that are opaque. Clouds are translucent. You cannot see any detail through them, but you can see that light is passing through.
Opaque objects do not allow light to pass through them, so they reflect or absorb light rays instead. When light strikes an opaque object, it scatters in different directions, some of which enter our eyes, allowing us to see the object.
You see color in an opaque object because of the way light interacts with its surface. When light hits the object, certain wavelengths are absorbed while others are reflected back to your eyes, which gives the object its color. This reflected light is what enables you to see the color of the opaque object.
The color you see when looking at an opaque object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off the object's surface and into your eyes. The object absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others, which your eyes perceive as color. Different colors are the result of different combinations of reflected wavelengths.
Opaque means see-through.
A menorah
Opaque is a word that refers to something not being see through. Since wood is not see through, it cannot be called opaque.
opaque transparency is when you can see through it but its all blurry
Yes. Cardboard is opaque. You cannot see through it.
You can't see through it, so it's opaque
If you can't see through an object clearly it is an opaque object.
The color of opaque objects is determined by the wavelength of light they reflect. When light strikes an object, certain wavelengths are absorbed while others are reflected to our eyes, creating the color we perceive. Different materials absorb and reflect light in varying ways, resulting in the wide range of colors we see in opaque objects.
Albino ferrets lack pigmentation and their eyes are opaque. The red or pink eyes is the blood behind the eyes.