1) any clear glass (with refractive index that is different from the region where the light is entering this clear glass)
2) any colour-less diamond.
3) any clear lens (concave, convex, etc)
4) (if you want to get really fancy ... :) ) any heavenly body with sufficient gravitational pull to "bend" the light ... though some would say light is still travelling in a straight line (and not actually bending) but is just happening to travel through warped space-time!!
5) Prism
The clear material that bends light rays as they pass through is called a lens. Lenses have the ability to either converge (focus) or diverge (spread) light rays depending on their shape and curvature. This property is essential in many optical devices such as cameras, microscopes, and eyeglasses.
A prism bends light rays. White light is made up of many different wave lengths of light. A prism bends each wave length a different amount, that is why different colors are produced from the output side of a prism.
A concave lens bends light away from its center, diverging the light rays.
Light does not bend as it passes through a material. It bends when it passes from one material to another. This is called refraction. Light can also be dispersed, that is separated into its different colours, if it is refracted enough.
No, concave lenses cause light rays to diverge outward when passing through them. This is due to the lens being thinner at the center than at the edges, causing light rays to spread out.
Glass.reflection
The clear material that bends light rays as they pass through is called a lens. Lenses have the ability to either converge (focus) or diverge (spread) light rays depending on their shape and curvature. This property is essential in many optical devices such as cameras, microscopes, and eyeglasses.
A prism bends light rays. White light is made up of many different wave lengths of light. A prism bends each wave length a different amount, that is why different colors are produced from the output side of a prism.
Refraction
a magnetic field
It bends the rays light which pass through it.
The Lens is the part of the eye that bends light rays .
A concave lens bends light away from its center, diverging the light rays.
Light does not bend as it passes through a material. It bends when it passes from one material to another. This is called refraction. Light can also be dispersed, that is separated into its different colours, if it is refracted enough.
The cornea is the part of the human eye that bends light rays the most when focused on a distant object.
No, concave lenses cause light rays to diverge outward when passing through them. This is due to the lens being thinner at the center than at the edges, causing light rays to spread out.
The lens bends the light rays to focus them on the retina.