On hot Summer days in the Louisville area while you are out driving, you may look ahead of you down the road and see what looks like a puddle of water in the road, but when you finally get up to where it was, it disappears and isn't even there. Have you ever wondered what this is and what causes it? 

This is known as highway mirage. The physics behind Earth's atmosphere is the reason behind why this phenomenon occurs during hot afternoons. Highway mirages are extremely convincing optical illusions caused by the interactions of light and hot air. You know how a spoon in a glass of water can appear broken or bent? This is known as atmospheric refraction, and it can occur within the atmosphere as well. This is what happens when light steers away from a straight line. It typically happens as light passes through the atmosphere at times when our planet’s air may be more or less dense, depending on its height above the ground. 

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When the rays from the sun reach the cooler air just above the warmer road, the speed of the particle of light increases just a tad, causing its path to change, or bend from your point of view. This makes something that looks like a puddle of water appear on the road. However, due to the bending of the light, this water is actually just a reflected image of the sky.  Because the reflection occurs solely at very shallow angles, the mirage appears only in the distance and continually recedes as one moves towards it. 

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 Courtesy: Sky-lights.org

Reach meteorologist Bryce Jones at BJones@wdrb.com, on Twitter or on Facebook. Copyright 2025. WDRB Media. All rights reserved.