plane mirror
Plane mirrors at 45°
plane miror
పెరిస్కోపులో ఉపయోగించే ప్రకారాలు: సమరసవాదీ కనులు, అనంత గిరెరౌండ్, నిద్రాపరాయణ కనులు.
No
The periscope has several parts: the ocular lenses, the mirror or prism, inversion/reversion prisms, relay lenses, another mirror or prism, and objective lenses.
A periscope is an optical instrument that uses a system of prisms, lenses, or mirrors to reflect images through a tube. Light from a distant object strikes the top mirror and is then reflected at an angle of 90 degrees down the periscope tube. At the bottom of the periscope, the light strikes another mirror and is then reflected into the viewer's eye.
peyguj
Tape a mirror to the inside of each flap. cut away the side of the cardboard opposite each flap. Angle both mirror flaps inward about 30 degrees. Look through the bottom of the periscope to see that what is seen on the top mirror is also reflected on the bottom mirror.
Mirrors have distortion in the images they project while prisms create undistorted images. :D
Light always travels in straight lines. It comes into the periscope, gets reflected once through 90 degrees by a mirror placed at an angle, then is reflected back through 90 degrees again by a second mirror. Sometimes lenses are also used to magnify the image.
The answer is that one mirror inside the periscope is meant to reflect the light onto the other mirror so that it goes back into your eyes. It was popularly used in World War I to see over the trenches without being a heavy target to artillery. It is also still used in submarines to see above water level whilst staying submerged.For a diagram that will (should) help, copy and paste the link below:http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/2000-05/959444445.Eg.1.jpg
Light from a distant object strikes the top mirror and is then reflected at an angle of 90 degrees down the periscope tube. At the bottom of the periscope, the light strikes another mirror and is then reflected into the viewer's eye. hope this helped :>
The basic periscope uses flat mirrors, to bend and offset the optical path. If magnification is required, then the periscope will use convex objective and eyepiece lenses, becoming a refracting telescope with an offset in its optical path.
In a tube, the light will bounce off on a 45 degree mirror twice until it will reach your sight.