What is bend? It’s when something curves or changes direction, like a stick when you press on it.
Imagine you have a straight straw in your hand, like the kind you sip juice from. If you gently push both ends toward each other, the straw doesn’t stay straight anymore, it starts to curve. That curving is bend. You can feel it with your fingers, just like when you twist or fold paper.
How bend works
When you press on something, it resists a little, and that’s what makes it bend. The more pressure you put on it, the more it curves, like pushing down on a spring. If you push really hard, the straw might even squish flat!
Bend in real life
Think about when you fold a piece of paper to make an airplane. You’re bending it so it can fly. Or look at a bridge, sometimes it’s curved because engineers use bend to help it hold up heavy cars.
Bend is just something changing shape, and you see it every day!
Examples
- A ruler bends when you press on both ends.
- A bridge arches slightly under heavy traffic.
- A piece of paper folds easily.
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See also
- How do magnets attract or repel each other without touching?
- How do magnets attract or repel objects?
- Why Do We Feel Gravity But Not the Other Forces?
- What are balancing forces?
- What are tension forces?