Light is a transverse wave, and its vibration direction can be perpendicular to its propagation direction. Ordinary natural light contains vibrations in all directions. A polarizer is a special optical material that acts like a "grating," allowing only light waves with specific vibration directions to pass through. When the polarization directions of two polarizers are perpendicular to each other, light cannot pass through at all, resulting in opacity; while when they are parallel, light can pass through to the maximum extent. Our "Polarization Maze" cleverly utilizes this principle: the maze's "walls" are made of transparent material, with some "false walls" covered with polarizing films of specific directions, and the glasses (or viewing windows) worn by visitors are fitted with lenses perpendicular to their polarization direction. Thus, in the visitor's eyes, these "false walls" appear "invisible" because the light is blocked, while the real walls are clearly visible, creating a vis