It is because of the sun.
The mirror get "moisturized" when you blow on it since your breath has water vapors in it. Once you breathe or blow onto the mirror, the water vapors from your mouth go onto the mirror and cool down, causing it to look like a cloudy surface.
Water can act like a mirror, but for you to see something in a mirror it has to be big enough, and angled in the right direction. Disturbed water will act like lots of small mirrors, pointing in every direction possible. Like trying to see something reflected in a disco ball.
It is the point at which all light rays seem to diverge from in the case of a concave mirror
Light is reflected from some light source (the sun) off of your face, to the water, and back into your eyes. The reason that you see yourself as opposed to just light, is that some of the color from the light is absorbed by your skin before it bounces off the water.
It depends what the intended use is. An 'ordinary' mirror - is flat, while a shaving mirror is usually convex - making the image seem larger.
It is like water. It reflects light so that makes it so you can see in the mirror
Water or a mirage.
The mirror get "moisturized" when you blow on it since your breath has water vapors in it. Once you breathe or blow onto the mirror, the water vapors from your mouth go onto the mirror and cool down, causing it to look like a cloudy surface.
because it has a large θ for the refraction
It is the point at which all the light rays seem to converge in the case of convex mirror.
Water can act like a mirror, but for you to see something in a mirror it has to be big enough, and angled in the right direction. Disturbed water will act like lots of small mirrors, pointing in every direction possible. Like trying to see something reflected in a disco ball.
Boil it
It is the point at which all light rays seem to diverge from in the case of a concave mirror
Light is reflected from some light source (the sun) off of your face, to the water, and back into your eyes. The reason that you see yourself as opposed to just light, is that some of the color from the light is absorbed by your skin before it bounces off the water.
It depends what the intended use is. An 'ordinary' mirror - is flat, while a shaving mirror is usually convex - making the image seem larger.
mirror yes it might not seem like it but it is u will proboly understand when u get into microscopes
because the water it looks like a refflected mirror but it bdoesnt and the stam of a flower it looks like it is broken but it is not broken