The image of an object will appear the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. This is due to the reflection of light rays creating a virtual image that mimics the distance of the object.
If an object is held extremely close to a concave mirror, the image will appear magnified, upside down, and virtual. The image will be located beyond the focal point of the mirror.
It would depend on the distance of the object from the mirror. If the object is close to the mirror, the reflected image may appear brighter due to magnification. However, if the object is far from the mirror, the reflected image may appear darker due to spread out light rays.
The image produced by a plane mirror will be virtual, upright, and the same size as the object. It will appear to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
An image in a plane mirror appears to be located behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror. This creates the illusion that the image is a mirrored reflection of the object, with the same size and orientation.
It's a virtual reflection of the object which appears as an image as much behind the mirror as the distance of the object in front.
If an object is held extremely close to a concave mirror, the image will appear magnified, upside down, and virtual. The image will be located beyond the focal point of the mirror.
It would depend on the distance of the object from the mirror. If the object is close to the mirror, the reflected image may appear brighter due to magnification. However, if the object is far from the mirror, the reflected image may appear darker due to spread out light rays.
The image produced by a plane mirror will be virtual, upright, and the same size as the object. It will appear to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
An image in a plane mirror appears to be located behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror. This creates the illusion that the image is a mirrored reflection of the object, with the same size and orientation.
The same speed: the image will always appear to be at a point exactly behind the mirror as the object is in front.
It's a virtual reflection of the object which appears as an image as much behind the mirror as the distance of the object in front.
When an object is up close to a concave mirror, the mirror will reflect an enlarged and upright virtual image of the object. The image will appear behind the mirror, and the size and orientation will depend on the distance of the object from the mirror's focal point.
The image in a plane mirror appears to be the same size as the object, but flipped left to right. Additionally, the image appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror.
The image formed by a concave mirror can be real or virtual, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. A real image is formed in front of the mirror and can be projected onto a screen, while a virtual image is formed behind the mirror and cannot be projected. Conversely, a convex mirror always produces a virtual, upright, smaller image of the object. The image appears closer to the mirror than the actual object and does not form a focused point.
As the object moves closer to a mirror, the image size increases. This is because the angle of reflection becomes larger, causing the image to appear larger as well. The image size will continue to increase as the object gets closer to the mirror.
The image does not appear different, nor does it change at all. The image is exactly the same.
The size of the image formed by a small mirror will be smaller than the actual object size, while the size of the image formed by a large mirror will be larger than the actual object size. This is due to the ratio of the distance of the object to the mirror and the distance of the image to the mirror being different for small and large mirrors.