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How to pronounce transmittance in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms transmission
Type of coefficient

Examples of transmittance

transmittance
Changes in Arctic sea ice result in increasing light transmittance and absorption.
From the sciencedaily.com
The U.S. standard is ANSI Z80.3-2001, which includes three transmittance categories.
From the en.wikipedia.org
A vertical alignment liquid crystal display with high transmittance and wide view angle.
From the orlandosentinel.com
Simulation of transmittance and enhancement of Faraday rotation compared with measurement.
From the nature.com
The specular transmittance was measured in the range of and 300-2500 nm.
From the nature.com
At the transmittance dip at shorter wavelength, the waveguide resonance is dominating the mode.
From the nature.com
Impedance spectroscopy studies the ability of a medium to impede or slow the transmittance of energy.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Light waves interact with an object by some combination of reflection, and transmittance with refraction.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Previous rigid endoscopes suffered from very low light transmittance and extremely poor image quality.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • The fraction of radiant energy that passes through a substance
  • In optics and spectroscopy, transmittance is the fraction of incident light at a specified wavelength that passes through a sample. A related term is absorptance, or absorption factor, which is the fraction of light absorbed by a sample at a specified wavelength. ...
  • The percentage of radiation that can pass through glazing. Transmittance can be defined for different types of light or energy, e.g., visible light transmittance, UV transmittance, or total solar energy transmittance.
  • The ratio of the flux transmitted by a medium to the incident flux.
  • The ability of the glass to transmit solar energy in the visible light, the ultraviolet, and the infrared ranges, centrally measured in percentages of each other.
  • The ratio (percent) of transmitted light to incident light for one part of the spectrum.
  • Is the fraction of radiant energy that, having entered a layer of absorbing material, reaches its further boundary. ...
  • The ratio of the radiant power transmitted by an object to the incident radiant power.
  • The total light transmitted by a system, usually given for normal incidence. This is the quantity most easily measured, although it is not the most convenient to work with mathematically. (See Section 4.1. ...