because of the lens, that gives us vision to see.
An object that is oriented down low would need to turn 180 degrees to become upright. This rotation flips the object from a downward-facing position to an upward-facing one. If the object is tilted at an angle rather than completely down, it would need to rotate the difference between its current angle and 90 degrees to reach the upright position.
A plane mirror produces an upright and laterally inverted image that is the same size as the object. A concave mirror produces a real or virtual, inverted or upright image that can be larger or smaller than the object depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. A convex mirror produces a virtual, upright, and smaller image compared to the object, regardless of the object's position relative to the mirror.
The image formed by a lens can be either upright or inverted, depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image will be real, inverted, and reduced. If the object is within the focal point, the image will be virtual, upright, and magnified.
Smaller than actual object and upright (right-side-up)
because of the lens, that gives us vision to see.
Real images can be both upright and inverted depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens or mirror. When the object is outside the focal point, the image is inverted. When the object is inside the focal point, the image is upright.
True. Real images formed by concave mirrors can be either upright or inverted, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point.
Its position.
No, neither word is being used as an adverb. Position is a noun and upright is an adjective describing the position desired.
This will depend entirely on the geometry of the convex mirror. Only if the mirror is a spherical shell will the answer be "no."
Convex lenses can produce both inverted and upright images. Whether an image is inverted or upright depends on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. If the object is placed beyond the focal point, the image will be inverted; if it is placed between the focal point and the lens, the image will be upright.
A concave lens always forms a virtual, upright, and reduced image regardless of object position. The image is located on the same side as the object and cannot be projected onto a screen.