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Why do things look bent in water?

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Answer: Light refracts at boundary

Water pressure distorts themWrong. Water pressure doesn't distort light or objects. Bending appearance comes from light refraction—light changes speed/direction crossing water-air boundary.

Light refracts at boundaryCorrect! Light travels slower in water (~225,000 km/s) than air (~299,700 km/s). At boundary, light bends (refracts) according to Snell's Law—angle changes based on speed difference. Brain assumes light traveled straight line from object—object appears displaced/bent. Why straws look broken in glass, pools look shallower than they are. Fishermen compensate when spearing fish! Total internal reflection uses same principle.

Eyes adjust incorrectlyWrong. Eyes work correctly. Bending is real optical effect—light refracts (bends) when crossing between media with different densities.

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