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Webelements.com has quite a lot of data on the elements, but I'm not seeing light transmission there. That seems very specialized, and would probably be highly wavelength/frequency specific too. Probably have better luck searching for transmission of a specific frequency band by a specific element rather than trying to find it all tabulated. Source: about 2 years ago
Mercury's functions are great and numerous, the program sadly became a bit resource hungry (better to spend 8 than 4GB of RAM, about 700+MB on the hard disk for a permanent installation. In this perspective, it is nice Jmol equally can be used to display/highlight symmetry relationships in crystals (link to an animated .gif) for less than 70MB when using Jmol's console. Source: about 1 year ago
Ptable - Interactive periodic table with dynamic layouts showing names, electrons, oxidation, trend visualization, orbitals, isotopes, and compound search. Full descriptions from write-up sources.
pymol - PyMOL is a powerful and comprehensive molecular visualization product for rendering and animating...
Periodic-table.io - Interactive periodic table of the chemical elements in 38 languages - Includes properties, history, name origin, facts, applications, hazards, isotopes and more
Avogadro - Avogadro is a free, fantastically easy to use molecule editor.
Kalzium - Kalzium (German for: Calcium) is a periodic table of the elements for KDE SC 4.
UCSF Chimera - UCSF Chimera is a highly extensible program for interactive visualization and analysis of molecular...