real, inverted and magnification less than one
the image will always be located somewhere on the opposite side of the mirror.
distance from mirror
Your right! You see technically we see up side down but with the light we see right side up so what that means is yes it is upside down. Well, since the brain doesn't turn it "right side up" it could be either way that you look at it.
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 focal point. It can affect size, real/virtual, inverted/upright.
Concave means that there is a dip in the object, like it has caved in. Bi-concave means that it is dipped in on two sides of the object. A good example is a red blood cell. It is a bi-concave disk - it has dips on two sides of it.
the image will always be located somewhere on the opposite side of the mirror.
The image formed is real, inverted, diminished and on the same side of the mirror as the object is.
If the object is closer to the concave mirror than its focal point, the image will be virtual, upright, and larger than the object. It will also be located behind the mirror.
the image will always be located somewhere on the opposite side of the mirror.
The object should be placed beyond the focal point of the concave mirror. This will produce a larger, magnified image located behind the mirror. By positioning the object past the focal point, the reflected rays will converge to form an image that is larger compared to the object.
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.
A concave mirror.
A concave mirror is typically used to create a magnified image of an object. The mirror curves inward and can produce an enlarged virtual image when the object is placed within the focal length of the mirror.
because the mirror used is concave mirror.
If our image is real and inverted and smaller than the object ,then it is a concave mirror; if the image is virtual and erect and larger than the object,then it is a convex mirror; if the image is of the same size as of the object,it is a plane mirror. that is how we can distinguish or identify which of the given mirrors are what. BUT if the angle is very small you cannot tell Plane is flat, convex it curves outwards and concave it curves inwards.
The object must be placed at a distance equal to the radius of curvature of the concave mirror in order for its image to be at infinity. In this case, the object must be placed 28.6 cm away from the concave mirror.
You would use a concave mirror to view an enlarged image of an object. Concave mirrors can focus light rays to create a magnified image that appears larger than the actual object.