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In case anyone is curious about _why_ light bends when it enters a lens:

First, light apparently slows down in some materials because the photons are constantly interacting with electrons, and these interactions create secondary waves that are slightly out of phase with the original light. The end result is a modified wave that effectively travels more slowly. So light going in a straight line through air travels more quickly than light going through a lens.

Second, getting more into quantum physics, light typically follows the shortest path from one point to another because that path tends to provide the most constructive interference between different possible routes. (The "why" of this is more involved; Feynman's book QED gives a good intro.)

Third, if you imagine a lifeguard running to rescue someone in the ocean, then they will take the fastest path, which is not directly toward the person in the ocean. Rather, they will run a bit more on the beach in order to have to swim less because travel through the water is slower. The end result is piecewise linear = two straight lines of travel, with a bend at the water line.

To summarize, you can ask "_why_ does light bend going into and out of lenses?" and the answer involves seeing light no longer as a particle but as a wave function (the quantum perspective), and then taking advantage of that wave function's tendency to prefer fastest-travel paths, and then noticing that the apparent bend is in fact the path of fastest travel.



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