Why does a straw look bent in water?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Light refracts at water surface
Water pressure bends the straw — Wrong. The straw isn't actually bent. It appears bent because light refracts (bends) when crossing from water to air, changing the angle we see.
Eyes see underwater differently — Wrong. Eyes work the same. The bent appearance is real optical refraction—light changes direction crossing from water to air due to density difference.
Light refracts at water surface ✓ — Correct! Light travels at different speeds in different materials. When light from the submerged part travels from water to air, it bends (refracts) because air is less dense. This makes the underwater portion appear offset from the above-water portion. It's refraction—light bending at interfaces!
More Light & Vision questions
- Indigo jeans look blue. Which light is the dye mostly taking away?
- Why are blue-green or white night lights often worse for insects than redder light?
- Moths circling a lamp are not simply aiming at it. What flight reflex gets hijacked?
- Why does glass break light into colors?
- Why do we see darkness when eyes are closed?
- Why do sunsets appear red and orange?
