I'm guessing the light ray is coming from air. When light passes from air to water, glass or plastic, the light ray "Refracts" meaning it bends towards the medium (The middle). However this is only the case when the second material the light passes through is denser than the original. In your case, air AND vacuum are less dense, infact they are the most dense with a density level of 1. Something like water on the other hand has a density of 1.33 meaning the ray of light that travels from air to water will bend towards the medium.
Lets take another example using one of the material stated in the question, I will continue using water as an example and... Crown glass. Remember water's density level is 1.33 and crown glass has a density level of 1.52. Lets say the light ray travels through water first this time which is known as incident ray and will pass into crown glass. Because crown glass is more dense than water, the ray will bend towards the medium. Ok now lets flip the question around, if the light ray passed through the crown glass first then refracted into water, the complete opposite would now happen; because crown glass is more and water is less dense, the ray this time will bend AWAY from the medium.
Its makes it contribute
Enough light gets through so that you can see the image clearly.
Objects that are partially/semi visible through
There are many see through or transparent objects at home such as: Eye glasses, windows made of glass, glass cups, plastic, some white clothes, if you have a fish tank I do, water is also see through.
Glass is see through and is better quality than plastic. Plastic is not as see through as glass anyway.
Glass objects can be made through the lost-wax process
Glass objects can be made through the lost-wax process
- Like glass , plastic , paper , clothes , etc.
Some transparent objects are water, air, and clear glass.
Yes it can. Unless the plastic and/or glass is too thick. Some types of glass and plastics make it harder for light to go through. ----------- The question is: Can light pass througth plastic or glass? The answer has to be either "both" or "glass", instead simply saying "yes"
Things you can some what see through. i.e stained glass, colored liquid, wax paper, ect.
No
plastic container, glass chandelier, clear pencil case and window.