You’re going to be a science explorer!
Great job learning new science words!
Refraction is the bending of light. Refraction happens because light travels at different speeds through different materials.
Amedium is a material that light travels through. Examples of mediums include air, water and glass.
Look at the picture of Sofia. She is looking at the fish in the water. She thinks the fish is in a straight line from her eyes, but it is not.

An optical illusion is something our eyes see that looks real but is not. The fish looks higher than it really is because the light bends.
The ray of light from the fish bends, or refracts, as it travels from the water into the air. This bending makes the fish appear in a different place.
You will need: a glass of water and a pencil
Method:
Questions:
How are we doing?
How well have you and your group done the demonstrations?
How well can you explain what happened using your scientific knowledge of refraction?
Choose from:
“We can explain refraction well” or “We are learning how to explain refraction” or “We need some help”
Alens is a transparent substance with at least one curved surface. Lenses refract light in useful ways. Our eyes have lenses in them. Other lenses that we use may be made of glass or transparent plastic.
People have used the science of refraction to make many useful things.
The lens bends light rays as they pass through it, so the rays change direction. This means the rays seem to come from a point that is closer or further away than they actually do. This is what makes objects seen through a lens appear either bigger or smaller than they really are.
Aconvex lens makes things look bigger. Light rays pass through the lens and bend inward and meet or converge at a point just beyond the lens. This point where the rays converge is called the focal point.

Convex lenses are used to make eyeglasses, projectors, microscopes, binoculars and telescopes. The lens brings distant light rays to a focus in our eyes. Some telescopes have such strong lenses that we can see distant planets and moons in the solar system.
You will need: a sheet of newspaper or an old magazine, a piece of plastic wrap, an eye dropper or very small spoon, a cup of water
Method:
Questions:
Test your ideas out.
Try to explain what has happened using your science knowledge.
Aprism is a triangular block of glass or clear plastic.
We usually see light as having no particular colour. We call this ‘white light’. But white light actually consists of different colours. When a narrow ray of white light passes through a prism, the ray refracts and splits into different colours. Each colour refracts at a different angle.

Look at the photograph at the beginning of this topic. Have you ever seen a coloured arc in the sky like this? It is called a rainbow. If you have seen one, you will know that it has to be sunny and raining at the same time. The Sun has to be shining behind you and the rain has to be falling in front of you.
Arainbow is another optical illusion. It happens when sunlight is refracted as it passes from the air to a raindrop. The raindrops act like tiny prisms. When this happens, our eyes see the seven colours which make up white light.