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3 answers

Particles of what? Absorbing what?

Transmittance? Does that refer to speed or temperature?

Excellent question if you want to get a ridiculous answer..

Anyways, I'm not all too sure what it is that you're after but perhaps this might clear things up for you a bit... Atoms have an easier time gaining (or absorbing..) electrons when they are traveling at a high rate of speed. This is why we have particle accelerators.. ;)

Now if "transmittance" refers to something else, like temperature... That is an altogether different story. Particles (atoms) start to emit radiation at high temperatures. This is how the sun warms our planet..

Of course there is a lovely little kink to this.. The faster an atom is traveling, the higher its temperature becomes.

Anyways, reword your question by replacing all of your generalizations with specifics. It'll make any answers you get much better than this.

2007-05-21 18:36:42 · answer #1 · answered by La Voce 4 · 0 0

If I'm not mistaken,I believe it's at lower percent,because they tend to bond together more at compact intervals,where higher percent tends to spread out,and break off into other lower percent transmittance respondents making it confusing to get a direct reading on how many there may be to begin with.But I could be wrong,since it's been so long since I was in a school studying different diversities of subject matters such as these.But let me know if it's right,so at least that way it will let me know if my memories are serving me correctly or not.

2007-05-22 01:46:27 · answer #2 · answered by gravedigger2u 3 · 0 0

If I rember correctly, % transmittance + % absorption = 1

2007-05-22 01:49:12 · answer #3 · answered by Helmut 7 · 0 0

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