When the rays are refracted they are bent towards the normal so that those that were near the top of the image come out near the bottom and vice versa.
we do get inverted image at the ratina. But this inverted image itself is being treated as errected by our mind.
No, an image formed by a convex mirror is always virtual and upright. Concave mirrors can form both real and inverted images.
Yes, the image formed by a convex mirror is laterally inverted. This means that the left side of the object appears as the right side in the image, and vice versa.
Whenever a real image is formed by a real object,the image is always inverted. for eg when light rays from infinity falls on convex lens it forms a real and inverted image at focal plane.
When an object is at infinity from a convex lens, the image will be formed at the focal point of the lens. The image will be a real and inverted point of light.
Convex lenses can produce both inverted and upright images. Whether an image is inverted or upright depends on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. If the object is placed beyond the focal point, the image will be inverted; if it is placed between the focal point and the lens, the image will be upright.
As an object moves closer to a convex lens, the size of the image increases. The orientation of the image remains the same, which means it is still upright if the object is upright and inverted if the object is inverted.
our optic nerves invert the image and our brain reads it
the image will be Unreal. Concave mirrors form a real and inverted image where in tn convex mirrors the images are unreal.
The image produced is a real image if the object is located at infinity and the lens is a convex lens. The produced image can actually be placed on a screen and photographed.
A double convex lens is thicker in the middle and thinner at the edges, causing light rays passing through it to converge. A double concave lens is thinner in the middle and thicker at the edges, causing light rays passing through it to diverge.
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).