plane & concave Mirrors create them
they are formed when rays actually meet
Real images are formed by actual light rays converging at a specific point, while virtual images are formed by the apparent intersection of light rays that do not actually converge. Real images can be projected onto a screen and are always inverted, while virtual images cannot be projected and are always upright.
A concave mirror can form real images or virtual images depending on the object position relative to the focal point of the mirror. Real images are formed when the object is located beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is located between the mirror and the focal point.
A lens can produce both real and virtual images. Real images are formed when light rays actually converge at a point and can be projected onto a screen. Virtual images are formed when light rays appear to diverge from a point but do not actually converge, and they cannot be projected.
Real images are formed when light rays actually converge at a specific point, while virtual images are formed when light rays only appear to converge at a point when traced back.
The concave mirror focusses images to its focal point. So the images formed are real inverted and increases in size as the distance between the aperture and the object decreases. When the object is placed between the focus and the aperture the image formed is virtual erect and magnified.
Two types of images produced by mirrors are real images and virtual images. Real images are formed when light rays actually pass through a point, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to be coming from a point but do not actually pass through it.
Convex lenses can form both real and virtual images. Real images are formed when rays converge at a point after passing through the lens, while virtual images are formed when rays appear to diverge from a point behind the lens.
In a concave mirror, images can form either real or virtual, depending on the object's distance from the mirror. Real images are formed when the object is placed beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is placed between the focal point and the mirror. The image formed is upright for concave mirrors.
Concave mirrors can form both real and virtual images. Real images are formed when the reflected light rays actually converge at a point in front of the mirror, whereas virtual images are formed when the light rays appear to diverge from a point behind the mirror. The type of image formed depends on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the mirror.
A concave mirror can form either a real or virtual image, depending on the object distance and mirror focal length. Real images are formed when the object is located beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is between the mirror and the focal point. Real images are inverted and can be projected onto a screen, while virtual images are upright and cannot be projected.
A virtual image is a copy of an object formed at the location from which the light rays appear to come. Whereas a real image is a copy of an object formed at the point where the light rays actually meet.
Concave mirrors can create either real or virtual images, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. Real images are formed when the object is positioned beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is positioned between the mirror and the focal point.