(or opacity) to various wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, including
visible light Understanding and measuring the absorption of electromagnetic radiation has a variety of applications. • In
radio propagation, it is represented in
non-line-of-sight propagation. For example, see
computation of radio wave attenuation in the atmosphere used in satellite link design. • In
meteorology and
climatology, global and local temperatures depend in part on the absorption of radiation by
atmospheric gases (such as in the
greenhouse effect) and land and ocean surfaces (see
albedo). • In
medicine,
X-rays are absorbed to different extents by different tissues (
bone in particular), which is the basis for
X-ray imaging. • In
chemistry and
materials science, different materials and molecules absorb radiation to different extents at different frequencies, which allows for material identification. • In
optics, sunglasses, colored filters, dyes, and other such materials are designed specifically with respect to which visible wavelengths they absorb, and in what proportions they are in. • In
biology, photosynthetic organisms require that light of the appropriate wavelengths be absorbed within the active area of
chloroplasts, so that the
light energy can be converted into
chemical energy within sugars and other molecules. • In
physics, the D-region of Earth's
ionosphere is known to significantly absorb radio signals that fall within the high-frequency electromagnetic spectrum. • In nuclear physics, absorption of nuclear radiations can be used for measuring the fluid levels, densitometry or thickness measurements. In scientific literature is known a system of mirrors and lenses that with a laser "can enable any material to absorb all light from a wide range of angles." ==See also==