In general, a given optical filter transmits a certain percentage of the incoming light as the wavelength changes. This is
measured by a
spectrophotometer. As a linear material, the absorption for each wavelength is independent of the presence of other wavelengths. A very few materials are
non-linear, and the
transmittance depends on the intensity and the combination of wavelengths of the incident light. Transparent
fluorescent materials can work as an optical filter, with an
absorption spectrum, and also as a
light source, with an
emission spectrum. Also in general, light which is not transmitted is
absorbed; for intense light, that can cause significant heating of the filter. However, the optical term
absorbance refers to the
attenuation of the incident light, regardless of the mechanism by which it is attenuated. Some filters, like
mirrors, interference filters, or metal meshes,
reflect or
scatter much of the non-transmitted light. The (
dimensionless)
Optical Density of a filter at a particular wavelength of light is defined as -\log_{10} T where is the (dimensionless)
transmittance of the filter at that wavelength. ==Absorptive==