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Because the lense of a projector inverts the image, you put the slide in upside down to view it right side up.Iin the process of inverting the image, up becomes down and right becomes left..
When the object is located at the 2F point, the image will also be located at the 2F point on the other side of the lens. In this case, the image will be inverted (i.e., a right side up object results in an upside-down image). The image dimensions are equal to the object dimensions. A six-foot tall person would have an image that is six feet tall; the absolute value of the magnification is exactly 1. Finally, the image is a real image. Light rays actually converge at the image location. As such, the image of the object could be projected upon a sheet of paper. Source: The Physics Classroom : Object-Image Relations (Image is on site)
yes
the brain processes the raw information,same reason you see pictures the right way up on a digital camera screen!
When looking through a microscope, if you move the slide left, the image will move right, and vice versa.
The stereoscopic microscope provides a right side up image
The image is inverted when it reaches the retina. The brain then interperets the image as right-side-up.
Stereoscopic
When the image reaches the eye, it is right-side up. The optics in your eye flip the image upside down in the process of absorbing the light. The up-side down image is then sent to your brain. You brain translates it back to right side up, and then creates the image for you to see. The image never appears upside down to you, because your brain does not create the image for you to see until it has flipped it back right-side up.
Your brain turns the image right side up because it is easier to try to have coordination right-side-up than upside down.
It forms a virtual, right side up, magnified image.
Place an object between a magnifying lens and its focal point. The image is right side up and larger than the object
A convex mirror.
It forms a virtual, right side up, magnified image.
Inside the camera it's inverted but afterwards you take the negative or the print and turn it up the right way.
The image on the back of the retina is upside-down but the brain converts the image to right-side up, just like the rotation of a photo in an imaging programme.
If you mean during printing and are referring to the projected image, it is upside down if you put the negative in the carrier the wrong way. The image should go upside down in the carrier so that it is projected right side up.