It must pass though a medium from an another medium.
For a light ray to refract when it strikes the boundary of a different medium, two things must occur: the light ray must enter the new medium at an angle, and the speed of light must change as it transitions from one medium to another, causing the light ray to bend.
No. Water droplets bend light to make rainbows.
modern microscopes that use lenses to bend what the answer is images
no , and its not calld 'bend' its called 'reflected' but its like bend but ITS NOT :)
Light does not bend.
This phenomenon is called diffraction. when light is incident on the opaque substances having width comparable to wavelength of light then light bend.
Magnifiers must have a lens or system of lenses that can bend and focus light rays, providing an enlarged image of the object. They also need a minimum focal length to enhance the size of the object when viewed through the lens.
Light can bend when it passes through different mediums with varying densities, such as air and water. This bending of light is called refraction. Additionally, light can also bend in the presence of gravitational fields, a phenomenon known as gravitational lensing.
Bend it
It will bend more.
Red light rays will bend the least when entering a drop of water, as red light has the longest wavelength of the visible light spectrum. Blue light rays will bend the most, as they have the shortest wavelength. Green light rays will bend somewhere in between red and blue.
Yes, light can bend as it passes through materials with different optical densities, a phenomenon known as refraction. This bending of light occurs due to the change in speed of light as it transitions from one medium to another.