A pair of plane mirrors cannot serve as effective retroreflectors on the Moon because they would only reflect light back in the direction it came from if they are perfectly aligned. Any slight misalignment would cause the reflected light to disperse, preventing accurate reflection back to the source. Retroreflectors, such as corner-cube prisms, are designed to reflect incoming light back to the source regardless of the angle, making them far more suitable for lunar applications.
In a plane mirror, the image appears to be the same size as the object, symmetrical to the object's position, and reversed from left to right. It is a virtual image, meaning it cannot be projected onto a screen.
If our image is real and inverted and smaller than the object ,then it is a concave mirror; if the image is virtual and erect and larger than the object,then it is a convex mirror; if the image is of the same size as of the object,it is a plane mirror. that is how we can distinguish or identify which of the given mirrors are what. BUT if the angle is very small you cannot tell Plane is flat, convex it curves outwards and concave it curves inwards.
Plane mirrors don't have one, I'd say it was 0.
The image seen in a plane mirror appears to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. This is because light rays reflect off the mirror and create a virtual image that appears behind the mirror at the same distance.
It is a mirror or a looking glass
No, a plane mirror cannot form a real image. It forms a virtual image that appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of it.
In a plane mirror, we see a reflection of ourselves or objects placed in front of it. The image formed in a plane mirror is virtual, meaning it cannot be projected onto a screen. The reflection appears to be the same size and distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
An image formed by a plane mirror cannot be projected onto a screen because the image is virtual and appears to be behind the mirror. This means that light rays do not actually converge at the location of the image, making it impossible to project onto a screen.
No. The two terms are mutually exclusive; something cannot be both flat and curved at the same time.
In a plane mirror, the image appears to be the same size as the object, symmetrical to the object's position, and reversed from left to right. It is a virtual image, meaning it cannot be projected onto a screen.
A plane mirror.
A plane mirror is a mirror which is completely flat, easier for your image to be reflected.
plane mirror
They cannot make light rays converge.
Plane mirrors produce virtual images that are upright and laterally inverted (left to right). These images cannot be projected on a screen and appear to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
plane mirror is never a spherical mirror,spherical mirrors are made up by cutting the part of the sherical balls and then polishing them.while the plane mirror is just a sheet of polished glass
No, the reflecting surface of a sculpture is typically not a plane surface like that of a plane mirror. It often has irregularities, textures, and contours that can distort the reflected image or create unique reflections.