Bi-lateral symmetry is the fancy name given to this.
Centipedes do it better than we, for they have more legs to match up.
napkin modess
Actually a plane mirror inverts an image not side to side, but front to back. If you hold up your right hand in front of a mirror, the images of the parts of your hand closest to you will be the farthest away. It is this inversion that turns a left hand into a right hand, while leaving the thumbs on both hands pointing in the same direction.
An unbroken mirror, assuming it is plain and flat, reflects all the light that hits it back to you. If the mirror is broken, the pieces are bent and therefore you may be able to see parts of object but not in its entirety. The light that hits the mirror is reflected in different directions and is not directed into your eyes.
The Mirror to be exact and the Diaphragm specifically the Iris and Disc Diaphragm
a. Eye piece b. Mirror c. Diaphragm d. Pillars Eye piece- let the observer peeks through Mirror- one that collects and reflects the lights Diaphragm- one that regulates the amount of light into the microscope Pillars- cost that support microscope
it is called reflections
Is a line of symmetry
Bilateral Symmetry
If I understand your question, the shape would be "geometrical"
Bilateral Symmetry
what are the parts of the curved mirror
It is a line of symmetry.
screw u
mirror
In Chemistry, an enantiomer are mirror images of each other. An optically active isometer has equal parts for the enantiometer. An isomer are compounds that are structured differently but have the same molecular formula.
The different types of symmetry are rotational symmetry whereby the various object parts are related by rotation angles, and reflectional symmetry where halves of the object form the mirror images.
screw u