Of sorts, it reflects and focuses it into a single path, instead of it just going anywhere it desires.
IN ADDITION:No. The reason for this is that the mirror blocks the light that it reflects. One side of the candle is twice as bright because of the mirror, but one side isn't lit at all. So the same amount of light, just directed differently. A convex mirror does focus the light from a candle into a tighter beam.A reflecting telescope "Has a mirror that collects light which is reflected to the eyepiece to show the image".
The mirror will shoot the light the way it is pointing.
it will reflect off it
It reflects back and a small amount is absorbed into its reflective surface.
the light is reflected back at different angles because the mirror is curved
A line of reflection is a reflected line, often off of a mirror. If a flashlight sends a beam of light at a mirror (the light is called the incident beam), the angle at which it hits the mirror will equall the angle at which the reflected beam of light (called the reflected beam), exits the mirror. This is called the Law of Reflection. This is why light is reflected from a mirror at the same angle at which light struck its surface. A line of reflection is a reflected line, often off of a mirror. If a flashlight sends a beam of light at a mirror (the light is called the incident beam), the angle at which it hits the mirror will equall the angle at which the reflected beam of light (called the reflected beam), exits the mirror. This is called the Law of Reflection. This is why light is reflected from a mirror at the same angle at which light struck its surface.
No, your shadow cannot be reflected in a mirror. A mirror can only reflect light that is directly shone on it, whereas a shadow is an absence of light being cast by an object blocking light sources.
- light reflected from a window- light reflected from a mirror- light reflected from snow
A mirror
When light hits a mirror, it is reflected back with the same angle as it hit the mirror. This is known as the law of reflection. The angle of incidence (incoming light) is equal to the angle of reflection (reflected light).
A reflecting telescope "Has a mirror that collects light which is reflected to the eyepiece to show the image".
Light hitting a flat mirror at an angle is reflected at the same angle, relative to the mirror surface.
by a mirror
light rays
Yes it is
The mirror will shoot the light the way it is pointing.
When light hits a concave mirror parallel to the principal axis, the reflected light rays converge at the focal point of the mirror.