Just draw a couple of ray diagrams through a positive lens and you will see that a real image has to end up inverted, just like the image in your eye, which your brain then sorts out to a right-way-up image.
No, the images produced by concave lenses are always virtual, erect, and smaller.
No, this is false.
false
Real images are always inverted
False
false
false
Only real images can be. In physics, real images are composed of light rays that converge to a focus for each point of the image. Thus they can be projected onto a screen. Virtual images have light rays which diverge as if they had come from points behind the source. Hence a screen will just be illuminated with unfocussed light. Outside of physics, the term "image" may also refer to any visible pattern or picture, in which case "projection", "real" or "virtual" don't mean a lot, though arguably, when you look at your TV or a postage stamp what you are seeing is a virtual image even though its all about as real as any image can be!
Real images are always inverted
False
false
False haha apex :)
Because when you extend the light rays, they diverge and never meet. so you must always extend the light rays back behind the object, this will always result in the image being upright and erect. Meaning it will always be virtual, never real.
They are always shown with colors that are not the true colors of the objects that were photographedGood luckSaleh AlkhrashiThey are always displayed in false color.
Graven images represent false gods.APEX 2020
true false-Nixon
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Only real images can be. In physics, real images are composed of light rays that converge to a focus for each point of the image. Thus they can be projected onto a screen. Virtual images have light rays which diverge as if they had come from points behind the source. Hence a screen will just be illuminated with unfocussed light. Outside of physics, the term "image" may also refer to any visible pattern or picture, in which case "projection", "real" or "virtual" don't mean a lot, though arguably, when you look at your TV or a postage stamp what you are seeing is a virtual image even though its all about as real as any image can be!
false
false