Reflection of light is when light bounces off a surface and goes somewhere else.
Imagine you're playing with a ball in a hallway. When you throw the ball at a wall, it bounces back to you, that's like how light works. Instead of a ball, we have light, and instead of a wall, we can have anything smooth, like a mirror or even water.
How It Happens
When light hits a surface, some of it goes through the surface (like when light passes through glass), but some of it just bounces back, that’s reflection. The smoother the surface, the better the bounce! A mirror is super smooth, so it reflects almost all the light.
What It Looks Like
If you look at a still lake on a sunny day, you can see your face in the water, that's reflection too! Just like how you see yourself in a mirror, you're seeing yourself in the water because the light from your face bounced off the surface of the lake and went into your eyes.
So next time you look at a shiny object or see your reflection somewhere unexpected, remember: it’s just light having fun and bouncing around!
Examples
- You see your face in the water because light bounces back from it.
- When you shine a flashlight on a shiny floor, it creates a bright spot.
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See also
- What are curved mirrors?
- What are light reflects?
- How Can a Single Light Bulb Make You See the Whole Room?
- Why Do Mirrors Reflect But Not Absorb?
- Why Do Mirrors Make You Look Backward?