The term refraction is defined as the                    bending of light as it passes from one type of material into                    another. Because light travels at different speeds in                    the two materials, it changes its speed at the boundary of the                    two materials. If a beam of light hits this boundary at an                    angle, then light hitting the side first will be forced to                    slow down or speed up before light on the other side hits the                    new material. This causes the beam to bend, or refract, at the                    boundary.
Suppose we were to place a coin in a glass of water.                    The light bouncing off the coin underwater, for instance,                   would have to first travel through the water and then                    the air to reach an observer's eye.  At the boundary,                    it gets refracted and reaches the observer's eye, thus                    appearing to be slightly raised.
In the pencil case, the pencil is placed at              a specific angle and looks bent at the point where it touches the              water, because light coming from the submerged portion of              the pencil gets refracted as it crosses the water-air boundary.



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