virtual image
yes it is seen inverted
yes.
It depends on whether the night vision goggles are image intensifiers or the type that are sensitive to infra red. Only the infra red type can see warm objects through fog. Image intensifiers will not be able to see through fog at all.
The microscope.
A Filter of some sort
virtual image
fragmentation hazards
You can contro the image's length and width in HTML by using the following code:Note: The ? indicates the number you coose. The "?" indicates the location of the image you wish to select.
On the Internet things don't really travel from one place to another. They more so exist on the Internet, which is everywhere.
Positive would be more magnification, and negative would be less magnification. * * * * * No. M > 1 indicates that the image is bigger than the pre-image (and on the same side of the centre of magnification); 0 < M < 1 indicates that the image is smaller than the pre-image (and on the same side of the centre of magnification); -1 < M < 0 indicates that the image is smaller than the pre-image (and on the opposite side of the centre of magnification); M < -1 indicates that the image is larger than the pre-image (and on the opposite side of the centre of magnification). M = 0 means the image is point-sized and at the centre of magnification. M = 1 means the image coincides with the pre-image. M = -1 means that the image is the same size as the pre-image and on the opposite side.
A Virtual Image
A virtual image is so named because there is no actual light rays originating from the image. Rather, the image is a construction of the human nervous system that retraces diverging light rays straight back to a single point of origin without regard of any lenses.
a grid is a device placed in front of the image receptor which only allows xrays to travel directly through from the tube and prevent xrays which have been "scattered" from passing through to the image. This gives a much clearer resulting image. Grids are generally only used on thicker body parts where scattered xrays are more of an issue
For a convex lens, if you trace out the path of the rays as they are refracted through the lens, you'll see that the inverted image gets reversed horizontally as well as vertically (in other words, the "inverted" image is really a 180 degree rotation about the axis through the center of the lens).
real image
real image
Light travels through two things: either empty space, or space which contains transparent materials. Some paterials are only partially transparent or translucent, in which case some light does travel through it, but not all the light will get through.