light rays
Light rays that hit a convex mirror are reflected and diverge. The reflected rays appear to originate from a point behind the mirror known as the focal point. This causes the image formed by a convex mirror to be virtual, upright, and diminished in size.
False. Rays reflected from a convex mirror do not always converge. In the case of a convex mirror, the reflection causes the rays to diverge away from each other.
Parallel rays are reflected by a mirror such that they remain parallel after reflection. This is due to the law of reflection, which states that the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection.
Reflected rays bounce off the mirror surface at the same angle they hit it, preserving the direction of the light beams. When many reflected rays converge at a single point, they form an image of the object due to the reflection properties of the mirror. This creates a virtual image that appears to be located behind the mirror surface.
That passes through the principal focus of the concave mirror
The light rays that leave a mirror are called reflected rays. They are the result of light bouncing off the mirror's surface at an equal angle to the incident angle.
When light hits a concave mirror parallel to the principal axis, the reflected light rays converge at the focal point of the mirror.
The mirror is a concave mirror. This behavior is a property of concave mirrors, where parallel rays of light are reflected and converge at the principal focus after reflection.
They are reflected at the angle of incidence.
Light rays striking a convex mirror are reflected away from each other due to the outward curve of the mirror. The reflected rays diverge and do not converge to a focal point, resulting in an upright and diminished virtual image.
Rays which are parallel to the axis of the concave mirror will converge to the focal point.
If several light rays enter a concave parabolic mirror parallel to each other andto the axis of the mirror, then they'll all converge at the focus of the mirror.If they enter the mirror from a variety of directions, then there's no telling whetherthey might intersect, or where.