"Translucent" means letting some of the light through. It does not mean anything about how much would be too much, though.
The term used to indicate how much light can pass through an object is transparency. Transparency refers to the property of allowing light to pass through without being scattered.
Yes, light can pass through glasses because they are transparent materials. However, some types of glasses may have coatings or properties that can affect how much light is transmitted through them.
The refractive index of a material determines how much a ray of light will bend when it travels through that material. The higher the refractive index, the more the light will bend. This bending of light is known as refraction.
Yes, light can go through cling film as it is a transparent material. However, some cling films may have additives that could affect the transparency and alter how much light can pass through.
Opaque basically means that something is not transparent; light can not pass through. For an example: the choroid of the eye is opaque, it absorbs excessive light so multiple images do not appear on the retina. Keep in mind that absorbing light is not the same thing as passing through. The choroid basically stops too much light from hitting the retina.
The iris (technically the diaphragm) lets light from the lens enter the camera. The entire lens can let light fall on the film or sensor. But, much of the time it doesn't do that. An device called an iris makes the hole through which light passes larger and smaller. When all the way open it lets light from the entire lens reach the film or sensor, but it can make the hole smaller and only allow light from a part of the lens enter.
How much light a material absorbs or lets through depends mainly on what kind of material it is. Usually pure substances will not absorb light but rather lets light through or reflects light. Exceptions include carbon, uranium and others. The exact theory goes into detail in how electrons absorb that energy and move to a higher orbital but generally, a material will let light through if the electrons require excessive energy to jump to a higher orbital.
transparancy is how much light can get through something, and viscosity has to do with thickness of a liquid
.....Lets just not answer that quitstion......
it works with a circuit.these tiny microscopic molecules travel through the wire. the filament, a very thin metal lets the molecules travel through, but at a much slower pace. this then causes it to burn and light the bulb up.
well lets just say something volublelike EVERYTHING!
Shutter speed controls the amount of time the camera's shutter is open, determining how much light reaches the sensor. A faster shutter speed lets in less light, while a slower speed lets in more light.
As much as you like because it really depends if the internet lets you or if it becomes a law or something
the check engine light means you have something wrong with your emissions. theres something wrong with how your car lets out exhaust. There are sensers on your exhaust pipe that sense how much exhaust is being let out and how much unburned fuel is coming out. There is a computer in your car that senses that and try's to fix it. one of your sensers might be bad or you might have a clogged catalatic converter.
Light travels much faster than sound, through wood.
The term used to indicate how much light can pass through an object is transparency. Transparency refers to the property of allowing light to pass through without being scattered.
Depends on the title, pressing, condition, etc. Unless it's something special/rare probably not much