An opaque material, such as metal or wood, does not allow any light to pass through it. This is because the material absorbs or reflects all incoming light, preventing it from transmitting through the object.
opaque.
When white light passes through a colored transparent material, the material will absorb some wavelengths of light and transmit others. The transmitted light will appear to be the color of the material, as it is primarily made up of the wavelengths that were not absorbed by the material.
Glass is a material that allows light to pass through and enables visibility due to its transparent properties. Additionally, plastics like acrylic or polycarbonate can also be used as transparent materials that allow light transmission and visibility.
The object you're referring to is likely a "medium," which is a material that allows light to pass through it. Mediums can include substances like air, water, glass, or plastic, and their optical properties determine how light behaves as it passes through.
If it lets NO light through it can not even give a blurry view, so your question makes no sense and cannot be answered.
translucent
opaque.
When white light passes through a colored transparent material, the material will absorb some wavelengths of light and transmit others. The transmitted light will appear to be the color of the material, as it is primarily made up of the wavelengths that were not absorbed by the material.
Glass is a material that allows light to pass through and enables visibility due to its transparent properties. Additionally, plastics like acrylic or polycarbonate can also be used as transparent materials that allow light transmission and visibility.
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.
translucent
Yes, that is correct
The object you're referring to is likely a "medium," which is a material that allows light to pass through it. Mediums can include substances like air, water, glass, or plastic, and their optical properties determine how light behaves as it passes through.
If it lets NO light through it can not even give a blurry view, so your question makes no sense and cannot be answered.
An opaque object or material does not allow any light to pass through it. This is because the structure of the material absorbs or reflects all incoming light, preventing it from passing through and creating a shadow on the other side.
Semi-transparent.
A material that allows all light to pass through is called transparent. Materials like glass, air, and water are examples of transparent substances that do not absorb or reflect light, allowing it to pass through with minimal distortion.