A convex lens
If it's both upside down and reversed from left to right, it would be equivalent to the image rotated 180 degrees.
Yes, a convex lens can produce a real inverted image that is reversed from left to right. This occurs when the object is placed beyond the focal point of the lens. The image is formed on the opposite side of the lens from the object.
This phenomenon is known as a real and inverted image. In the case of a convex lens like that of the eye, the image is upside down and reversed from left to right due to the way light rays converge after passing through the lens.
No, a plane mirror does not flip an image upside down. It produces a mirror image that is laterally inverted, meaning left and right are switched, but top and bottom remain the same.
Because that is how the brain is organised. Once it is processed, the brain knows what way the image should be. While your eyes' lenses may create an inverted (upside down) image, the brain corrects this automatically, so there is no "upside-down" to be noticed.
Yes, in a compound microscope, the image is upside down and reversed left to right. This is due to the way the lenses refract and bend light rays. However, the image can be further adjusted using additional lenses to correct the orientation.
When observing an image under a light microscope, it is reversed because the image appears upside-down compared to the actual specimen. Additionally, the image is inverted, meaning that left and right are switched. This occurs due to the way light rays pass through the lenses of the microscope, causing the image to be flipped in this manner.
The image produced by the lens of the eye is flipped upside down and reversed from left to right. This is due to the way light rays converge and refract as they pass through the convex lens of the eye before hitting the retina, where the image is processed by the brain to appear right side up.
The word "NOON" is an example of an image that reads the same right side up and upside down.
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.
In reflections, "reversed" means that the image appears flipped from left to right compared to the original object. Each point on the object is reflected across the mirror line to create the reversed image.
Is called real image. The image formed on the retina as a result of the refractory activity of the lens is a real image (reversed from left to right, inverted, and smaller than the object)