
Bryan
- Use the diagram below to explain why a bright spot is formed under the pencil when it is being pulled out of the water. Use ideas about refraction of light to explain the phenomenon.
hi- Why is there a bright spot, though? I have no idea (other than its related to refraction)
The curved water acts like a converging lens or a prism, bending light rays from all sides towards the center. These rays overlap and concentrate directly under the pencil, creating a focused bright spot.- so its a lens? why does it focus in the centre?
- or is it not a lens
As you pull the pencil out of the water, the water clings to the side of the pencil due to surface tension (adhesion). This pulls the water surface upwards, creating a curved shape (a meniscus) that slopes up towards the pencil.
it is acts like a lens- okay i think i sort of understand now (sort of?) gimme time to digest
ok\
This phenomenon is essentially the water acting as a magnifying lens that focuses the overhead light into a single point below the object.- oh i see now thanks cher
welcome!




Adeline Lee,



