erect image.
When light rays hit the concave side of a shiny spoon, they are reflected and converge to form an upright, virtual, and magnified image. This image appears behind the spoon's reflective surface, in the same orientation as the object being reflected.
because one side is concave and the other is convex
When you look into the deep side a spoon, you appear to be upside down because the light particles that reach the spoon reflect in different angles, reversing the image inside. This happens because the spoon is not completely flat, and the curves create such an effect.
An image that is upside down as compared to the object are known as inverted images. Example, the first thing you will notice is that the concave side of the spoon makes your image come upside down. Such an image is called an inverted image.
Yes
No. "Real" image is not the same as "real" object. Nor does it show your structure, only your external appearance - and then in a very distorted way because the spoon is not designed to be a mirror!
Of course not, It shows your external appearance not structure, and the image may be "real" in optical terms but is heavily distorted by the shape of the spoon. They give you lot some peculiar homework questions! :-)
The spoon acts as a concave mirror at it's "loading surface". The idol of an object through a concave mirror which is further than the doubled focal length of it, is real, smaller and inverted (upside-down).
What a nice question. These two different images illustrate the difference between a reflection from a concave and a convex surface. However, if you look in a concave beauty/shaving mirror, you'll still find the image erect. For you will be closer to the mirror than the length of its focus. Enlarged a little indeed.
your reflection is upside down on the front part of a spoon for one main reason. The interior part of a spoon in 'concave' meaning it curves inward. when light is reflected of a concave surface, it overlaps and is projected off the spoon upside down. ...
Dark Side of the Spoon was created on 1999-06-08.
A spoon has a concave mirror shape due to its curved inner surface. This type of mirror can produce both real and virtual images depending on the object's position relative to the focal point.