Submitted by TheFeshy t3_11381g0 in askscience
Let's say we've got light entering a cubic piece of glass, at some angle less than 90 degrees. When it enters, it will be bent at some angle relative to its original path. When it exits, it will resume traveling at its original direction. During this time it will also slow down. (I watched this video explanation as to how this process works.)
Photons have no mass, but they do carry momentum.
During the time the light is inside the glass (let's say it's a very short burst or a very large piece of glass), it's momentum vector is different than when it is traveling in the (for the sake of simplicity) vacuum outside. I have no idea how its momentum is affected by the speed changes, but certainly it would be affected by the direction change. And the conservation of momentum says that this momentum should be exchanged with the glass block.
Now obviously the amounts involved would be minuscule and likely undetectable, given any reasonable source of light and piece of glass. But I'm trying to see if I understand the theory correctly.
rootofallworlds t1_j8p7aqi wrote
Yes, by conservation of momentum if light is refracted in a way that's not symmetric, momentum must be imparted to the lens. It doesn't even need to be a single pulse - a prism will refract light asymmetrically, and an off-axis section of a spherical-surfaced lens will do it.