The characteristics of an image formed by a convex spherical mirror are virtual, upright, and diminished in size. The image is formed behind the mirror and its size is smaller than the object being reflected.
The mirror in this case is a convex mirror, as virtual images are formed by convex mirrors.
This will depend entirely on the geometry of the convex mirror. Only if the mirror is a spherical shell will the answer be "no."
Spherical mirrors can form either real or virtual images depending on their design. Concave mirrors can form real images that are inverted if the object is placed beyond the mirror's focal point. Convex mirrors always produce virtual images that are upright and smaller than the actual object. The image characteristics will vary based on the object's distance from the mirror and the type of mirror being used.
A convex mirror forms a virtual, upright, and diminished image of the object placed in front of it. The image is also located behind the mirror.
If you were inside a concave (or convex) spherical mirror, you would see a distorted and magnified (or shrunk) version of your own reflection. The image formed would depend on the type of mirror and your position inside it.
The mirror in this case is a convex mirror, as virtual images are formed by convex mirrors.
This will depend entirely on the geometry of the convex mirror. Only if the mirror is a spherical shell will the answer be "no."
upright and smaller than the object
The nature of the image is not constant. It varies with the distance between the object and the mirror.
Plane Mirror And Other Spherical Mirrors Bulged Outside, Such As Convex Mirrors
Spherical mirrors can form either real or virtual images depending on their design. Concave mirrors can form real images that are inverted if the object is placed beyond the mirror's focal point. Convex mirrors always produce virtual images that are upright and smaller than the actual object. The image characteristics will vary based on the object's distance from the mirror and the type of mirror being used.
The image formed by a convex spherical mirror can be either real or virtual, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image is real, inverted, and diminished. If the object is between the mirror and the focal point, the image is virtual, upright, and magnified.
A convex mirror forms a virtual, upright, and diminished image of the object placed in front of it. The image is also located behind the mirror.
If you were inside a concave (or convex) spherical mirror, you would see a distorted and magnified (or shrunk) version of your own reflection. The image formed would depend on the type of mirror and your position inside it.
The image formed by the convex mirror is virtual, erect and diminished.
A convex mirror always forms a virtual image, meaning that the light rays appear to be coming from a point behind the mirror. Thus, a real image is never formed by a convex mirror.
A plane mirror is flat, so your image is the same size as you. A spherical mirror is curved. If concave it can be used either to focus an image as in a reflecting telescope, or magnify as in a shaving/makeup mirror. If convex you get a smaller wide-angled image, as in a car's wing mirror