Objects will look larger when viewed through the side of a water-filled glass due to refraction. Light bends as it passes through the water and then again when it enters the air, causing the object to appear magnified.
Yes, refraction can make objects appear larger and closer when looking through a mask underwater. This is due to the bending of light as it passes from water to air, making objects appear closer than they actually are.
A magnifying lens or magnifying glass is used to make objects appear larger when viewed through it.
When you look underwater, objects appear closer than they actually are due to the refraction of light. The way light moves through water causes objects to appear closer and larger than they really are, which can make judging distance and size more challenging when viewing objects underwater.
When light passes from air into water, it slows down and changes direction, causing objects to appear closer to the surface than they actually are. This change in how light bends at the air-water interface creates a magnifying effect, making things look larger when viewed from above the water's surface.
Water bends or refracts light, not only do things look bigger they are not where they appear to be.
Objects will look larger when viewed through the side of a water-filled glass due to refraction. Light bends as it passes through the water and then again when it enters the air, causing the object to appear magnified.
microscope
A Microscope.
Yes, refraction can make objects appear larger and closer when looking through a mask underwater. This is due to the bending of light as it passes from water to air, making objects appear closer than they actually are.
Larger
Magnifier
No.
Any distortion in the light that gets from the object from your eyes - for example, refraction if the object is under water.
Your finger does not shrink. Your skin soaks up water and gets larger. It makes it look like your fingers shrink but its just your skin that is larger.
Objects appear larger and closer underwater due to the refraction of light. Light waves bend when they pass from one medium (air) to another (water), causing the underwater object to look magnified and closer than it actually is.
You need a convex lens to magnify an image.