Water is blue because it absorbs some colors and reflects others, like how a filter on your toy phone changes what you see.
Imagine you're playing with colored blocks in a bath tub. Water acts like a special kind of filter: it takes away the red, yellow, and green parts of light, but leaves the blue part to bounce back to your eyes. That's why we see water as blue, it’s just showing us the color that didn’t get taken away.
Why It Happens
Water is made up of tiny little things called molecules, and they like to dance with the light that comes through them. When sunlight shines into a lake or ocean, it has all the colors mixed together, like a rainbow. But the water molecules are good at absorbing some of those colors, especially the ones deeper in the water.
The blue color is the one that gets sent back up to your eyes, making everything look blue from above.
So next time you're at the beach or looking at a glass of water, remember, it's not magic, just tiny molecules having fun with light! Water is blue because it absorbs some colors and reflects others, like how a filter on your toy phone changes what you see.
Imagine you're playing with colored blocks in a bath tub. Water acts like a special kind of filter: it takes away the red, yellow, and green parts of light, but leaves the blue part to bounce back to your eyes. That's why we see water as blue, it’s just showing us the color that didn’t get taken away.
Examples
- A swimmer wonders why water feels clear but appears blue from above.
- A student sees a glass of water in sunlight and thinks it might be magical.
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See also
- How Do Holograms Actually Work?
- Why Do Holograms Look Like They're Floating?
- What is Interact with light?
- How Does Reflection vs Refraction Work?
- How Does Converging Lens Demo Work?