0 the effect that is created when light is reflected at many different angles and there is no clear image
1 the effect that is created when light is reflected at many different angles and there is no clear image
When light from any luminous object falls upon books, desks, or dishes, it meets rough surfaces, and hence undergoes diffuse reflection, and is scattered irregularly in all directions.
Diffuse reflection patterns were thus evident for the majority of samples of soft tissue epidermis and dermis and also for adipose tissue of the digital cushion.
Most of the objects visible to the naked eye are identified via diffuse reflection.
It describes the way a surface reflects light as a combination of the diffuse reflection of rough surfaces with the specular reflection of shiny surfaces.
Increases in porosity can increase light refraction, diffuse reflection and scattering, resulting in a brightening of the material's surface.
Reflection from smooth and polished surfaces can be assumed to be specular reflection, whereas reflection from rough surfaces approximates diffuse reflection.
In diffuse reflection, radiation is reflected equally in all directions.
Some lasers are so powerful that even the diffuse reflection from a surface can be hazardous to the eye.