esmeralda4 said:
I can understand if it's to do with the increase in energy - therefore gamma is most penetrating but what I really don't get is why radio waves go through most stuff?
What do you mean by radio waves going through most stuff? For example say you have an FM radio wave generated by a radio station. The energy level of that type of wave is low in comparison with the Electromagnetic spectrum we are familiar with. Now let's say you were in a big wooden box with a hand held radio, you still get a signal, so the signal penetrates that box. But some forms of light cannot penetrate that box, is this what you mean but goes through most stuff?
My theory would be that the wood of the box does not absorb any of the radio waves. If it were a metal box, the electromagnetic energy would want to travel around the outside of the box, and you would get no signal sitting inside of it with your receiving radio.
This is a good question though, could probably get really complicated. If you shine a flashlight at the box, it won't penetrate right? or maybe it will? A light source has a magnetic wave and an electric "field" perpendicular with it at all times, maybe the wood would block one of those properties?
I know too that the higher energy levels light ultra, x ray and gamma rays start to become more ionizing than just the longer wavelengths. So these waves are powerful enough to ionize a substance. Then some waves lead will block, but others lead won't block but ten feet of concrete will.
Also if something is opaque to us, like a black piece of paper or fabric, or even a solid black piece of plastic, visible light won't pass through it, but infrared light may still pass right through it.
just like in optics how you can have a band pass filter where no visible will pass, infrared will pass, but UV won't. I think it has something to do with the material absorbing the other lights but not the infrared.
Wow this is an awesome question. This is way out of my area of knowledge though but i would like to see someone answer this.