Usually as we say the details of the image we point out their, size, position, type and nature.
In case of plane mirror,
size = same size of the object
position = at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror
type - erect one
nature - virtual image. This means could be seen but not be caught on a screen.
In 'a' plane mirror only 'one' image is formed.
virtual :-)
The distance of the object from the mirror line should equal the distance of the image from the mirror line.
same distance
The answer is 15 millimeters behind the mirror, and the distance from the actual object to the image is 30 millimeters. Plane mirrors have a flat focus that places the image as far behind the mirror as you are in front of it.
Just a mirror image x
image form can be form by virtual image
A plane mirror forms an erect, virtual image of the same size as the object. As a person gets closer to a plane mirror, the image gets larger.
virtual
upright and not reversed
"Real" and "virtual" are two opposite, mutually exclusive categories of images. An image is either one or the other, and no image can be both. The image produced by a plane mirror is a virtual one.
The image formed by a plane mirror is virtual image.
image form by plane mirror are virtual,upright,left- right reversed,the same distance from the mirror as the object's distance,and the same size as the object.............that's all
Concave: a curved like a segment of the interior of a circle or hollow sphere; hollow and curved Convex:having a surface that is curved or rounded outwards plane-a flat mirror
the image in a plane mirror is always
When the incident light rays are falling towards the mirror in such a way that the light rays after falling on the mirror meet at any point in front of the mirror than an image is formed in front of the mirror which can be taken on a screen and as the image can be taken on a screen it is known as a real image. So, plane mirrors can form real images.
A plane mirror forms 1 virtual image and no real image. The virtual image is behind the mirror, at the same distance as the object in front of the mirror, erect, in mirror image left-right.