Touchphones work by feeling your finger moves across their screen, just like how a smooth slide feels when you glide your hand along it.
Inside the phone, there are tiny sensors called touch sensors that act like little detectives watching your finger. Every time your finger touches or slides on the screen, these sensors notice the change and send a message to the phone’s brain.
Like a Map of Pressure
Imagine the screen is like a soft pillow covered in tiny buttons, each button is so small you can’t see them. When your finger presses down, it pushes some of those tiny buttons. The more pressure you use (like when you press hard), the more buttons are pressed at once.
Swiping Like You're Drawing
When you swipe your finger across the screen, you’re like an artist drawing a line, only instead of using a crayon, you're using your finger! As your finger moves, the phone keeps track of where it went and how fast. That's why you can scroll through photos or slide to open apps, it’s all about movement!
So next time you swipe, remember: it's not magic, it's science working like a friendly helper inside your phone!
Ask a question
See also
- How Does France’s Darkest Hours: When the SS Publicly Executed Resistance Fighters Work?
- How To Use An Abacus?
- What do GPS and AGPS mean?
- What is 9 calories per gram?
- What is Temperatures between 60°C and 75°C?