convex lens
retina
Because that is how the brain is organised. Once it is processed, the brain knows what way the image should be. While your eyes' lenses may create an inverted (upside down) image, the brain corrects this automatically, so there is no "upside-down" to be noticed.
Well when a word is shown in front of a mirror the reflection of the word upside down. This is called mirror image.
Concave lens (diverging) produces an upright image that is virtual. Although to create a real upright image would require 2 convex (converging) lens with a distance of their respective focal lengths between them.
Not at all. The first example we can think of is the real image of what you see,formed on the retina of your eye, which is inverted. We suspect that all realimages are inverted.A2. From a grammatical point of view, real and image are not the same thing.Images may be reversed, inverted, or even be negative. It may be better to refer to a 'normal' image rather than real.
yes
A convex lens
If it's both upside down and reversed from left to right, it would be equivalent to the image rotated 180 degrees.
a real image lab exercise 24 p 371, description for figure 24.8 Marieb & Mitchell Human Anatomy and Physiology Laboratory Manual 10th Edition
retina
your face on a spoon
true
Is called real image. The image formed on the retina as a result of the refractory activity of the lens is a real image (reversed from left to right, inverted, and smaller than the object)
The image will be formed upside-down and reversed horizontally on the back of the inside of the camera.
why is image reversed under a microscop
An image that is upside down as compared to the object are known as inverted images. Example, the first thing you will notice is that the concave side of the spoon makes your image come upside down. Such an image is called an inverted image.
Orientation reversed typically refers to when the orientation of an object, such as a device screen or image, is flipped upside down or rotated 180 degrees. This can happen intentionally or due to a technical issue.