Why Does Laser Light Bend in a Spring?

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Laser light bends in a spring due to the phenomenon of total internal reflection, which occurs when light travels from a medium with a higher index of refraction to one with a lower index. This behavior is explained by Snell's Law, which governs the refraction of light at boundaries between different materials. In the case of the spring, the light reflects internally rather than returning to the surrounding air, similar to how it behaves with a mirror. The discussion clarifies that total internal reflection can happen in various materials, not just water or air. Understanding these principles helps explain why the laser light behaves as observed in the experiment.
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Hello.
I saw this experiment:

The light from laser is bending in small hole and moving in spring. I don't understand why.
Please, can you tell me why? Why does spring moving in spring, not in air? It will happens in each spring? Why it occurs?

Thank you very much
 
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Like the description on the video says, this is called "total internal reflection."

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/phyopt/totint.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_internal_reflection

A Google search finds many other pages about it.

The basic explanation for it is the behavior of Snell's Law (which describes the refraction of a light ray at a boundary) when the light travels (or tries to travel) from a material with a higher index of refraction (e.g. water) to a material with a lower index of refraction (e.g. air).
 
The ray reflect back to the watter, not to air because it is total reflection, OK. So, why the ray don't go back to the watter in the bottle but go to the spring?
 
Total internal reflection is like ordinary reflection from a mirror. When a light ray hits a mirror at a glancing angle (not "head-on") it doesn't come backwards on itself.

More precisely, a mirror reverses a light ray only along the direction perpendicular to the mirror surface, not along the direction parallel to the mirror surface.
 

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