on retina
You see things through your eye. All objects reflect light. Therefore, when light from a object reaches you eye it forms an image. This is how you see.
retina is the part in eye which inverts the image visible to us and then magnifies it.
inverted
If you could see the image projected onto the retina of the eye by the lens, it would be of the environment that the person in question is looking at, but upside down.
A lens is.
these nuts
the retina
-- You don't 'see' a virtual image, unless it somehow continues to your eye and forms a real image there. -- The image formed on the light-sensitive surface of your eye is, as you said, real and inverted. The brain does a neat job of interpreting it as an erect image. When experimental subjects are fitted with glasses that invert the image before it enters the eye, so that it arrives at the retina upside-down, the subject's brain is able to make the correction within a few hours and everything works fine again.
Trick question. Your brain receives an image from your eye that is upside down. It flips it around by itself.
The image of an object formed on the retina of the human eye is called Image Formation. Image Formation is the natural processing of light through the eye.
It doesn't form an image on the eye but in the brain.
You see things through your eye. All objects reflect light. Therefore, when light from a object reaches you eye it forms an image. This is how you see.
The retina is where the image is formed.
concave lens always forms a virtual image
for 1/16th of a second an image persist on retina of human eye
retina is the part in eye which inverts the image visible to us and then magnifies it.
In a concave lens the object always forms a virtual image. The convex lens also forms a virtual image.