The comb steals electrons from your hair, making it negative. Water has no charge.
Since all the electrons are negative, and likes repel, the electrons try to get as far away as possible. Trying to get on the other side of the water.
Water
I would say yes. As soon as the wave stops being a wave in shallow water then becomes a crest; bending.
No. Water droplets bend light to make rainbows.
Sun River, OR.... Madras, OR.
The speed of water at a river bend flows much faster and deeper on the outside of the bend. On the inside of the bend the velocity is much slower and shallower.
Water
The ray will bend towards the normal.
As the river flows around the outside of the bend, it accelerates just like when a car goes around a bend. The water, like a car, is pulled toward the outside of the bend through centripetal force (which is why road bends are often banked). The same thing happens to the water surface. It actually rises around the outside of the bend. This higher elevation of the water surface means that the water on the outside of the bend is slightly deeper than the inside. Since water always tries to seek a level surface, the water on the outside of the bend actually flows downward, along the bottom and comes back up on the inside of the bend. This secondary current pushes material from the outside of the bend back up on the inside of the bend - and that's where sand bars come from. So the combination of accelerated flow around the outside combined with the secondary current moving downward erodes the outside of the river bend.
Using various mathematical formulas such as a 45 degree offset would be 1.4142Then there is 90 DEG, 60 Deg, 45 Deg, 22.5 Deg 11 1/4 DEG1/4 bend 1/8 Bend 1/16 Bend 1/32 Bend and then once yo know the angle you want then do the math
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bend on your knees and say would you Marie me but make sure your close friends first bend on your knees and say would you Marie me but make sure your close friends first
The moon can bend water. I don't think there are any humans that can bend though.