Naked Science Forum

General Science => General Science => Topic started by: chris on 18/03/2016 19:18:42

Title: Why do wet things look darker?
Post by: chris on 18/03/2016 19:18:42
Water flicked onto a wall, paint that is not dry and freshly-washed hair are all darker than their dry equivalents. Why?
Title: Re: Why do wet things look darker?
Post by: guest39538 on 18/03/2016 21:28:43
Water flicked onto a wall, paint that is not dry and freshly-washed hair are all darker than their dry equivalents. Why?

Waters more reflective than the wall so the wall becomes a blacker body that can be seen through the transparency of the water?

In simple terms the water creates a barrier?




Title: Re: Why do wet things look darker?
Post by: RD on 18/03/2016 23:57:32
... freshly-washed hair ... darker than ... dry ...

Water-coated-fibres will be similar to fibre-optics ...
(https://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thenakedscientists.com%2FHTML%2Fuploads%2F300x236xRTEmagicC_FibreOptics-stream_01.gif.gif.pagespeed.ic.7ZD73yi8wX.png&hash=d473d080bfa0895ebab78befa88b21a0)
http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/experiments/exp/water-fibre-optics/

The internal-refection (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_internal_reflection) will repeatedly redirect some of the light back towards the fibres where some will be lost as heat. These additional reflections from fibres, (losing some light-energy each time), would not have occurred if the fibres were dry.

Database Error

Please try again. If you come back to this error screen, report the error to an administrator.
Back