rainbow coloured
A mirror simply reflects light, so the color you perceive when a mirror reflects another mirror is based on the lighting and objects around them. In this scenario, you would likely see a series of reflections creating a tunnel-like effect rather than a specific color.
A mirror does not have a color of its own. It appears to be the color of whatever is reflected in it. This is because a mirror reflects light, rather than emitting its own color.
A mirror does not have a color of its own. It reflects light by bouncing off the surface of the mirror at the same angle it hits it, creating a clear and accurate reflection of objects in front of it.
The Correct Answer Is Green Want A Proof? Buy 2 mirrors. then look at the reflection of the mirror and the mirror and so on The Color Of The Mirror On The Back Turns Green And Greener :P Sorry For My bad English!
When light hits a mirror, it either reflects onto another mirror, or bends and travels until it hit an opaque object.
No, a concave mirror and a convex mirror have different curvatures and focal points. A concave mirror reflects light inward, converging it to a focal point, while a convex mirror reflects light outward, diverging it. They cannot interchange their functions.
Anything the mirror reflects.
ans:thats a mirror - so suppose its a mirror colour.
Mirror
1) what objects reflects light?_______________________________ mirror
The betta fish will see the mirror and then will be curious about it, because the mirror reflects the betta fish and they might think that it is another fish, so the fish will act differently.
When a ray of light reflects off a mirror and then onto another mirror, the direction of the reflected ray is determined by the angle of incidence relative to the surface of the second mirror. The law of reflection states that the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection, so the reflected ray will bounce off the second mirror at an equal but opposite angle to the incident ray.