Of course not. The first thing you do when you get a convex lens is use it to create
an image of the sun that's small enough to roast an ant. You have a 1.4-million-km
object, and a 1-mm real image. The image is 1.4 billion times smaller than the object.
A concave lens can produce images that are smaller than the object, whereas a convex lens can produce images that are larger than the object. This is due to the way light rays are refracted by the different shapes of the lenses.
A. virtual, upright, and larger than the object.
The object should be placed farther than the focal point of the concave mirror along the principal axis. This will result in a real inverted image that is larger than the object and located beyond the center of curvature of the mirror.
A concave mirror can give a virtual and larger image than the object when the object is placed within the focal length of the mirror. When the object is placed beyond the focal point, a real, inverted, smaller image is formed.
A converging mirror, such as a concave mirror, can produce real and inverted images for objects located beyond the focal point, or virtual and upright images for objects located between the focal point and the mirror. The size of the image can be larger or smaller than the object depending on its position relative to the mirror.
A concave lens can produce images that are smaller than the object, whereas a convex lens can produce images that are larger than the object. This is due to the way light rays are refracted by the different shapes of the lenses.
A. virtual, upright, and larger than the object.
A scale drawing!
A scale drawing.
The object should be placed farther than the focal point of the concave mirror along the principal axis. This will result in a real inverted image that is larger than the object and located beyond the center of curvature of the mirror.
A concave mirror can give a virtual and larger image than the object when the object is placed within the focal length of the mirror. When the object is placed beyond the focal point, a real, inverted, smaller image is formed.
A converging mirror, such as a concave mirror, can produce real and inverted images for objects located beyond the focal point, or virtual and upright images for objects located between the focal point and the mirror. The size of the image can be larger or smaller than the object depending on its position relative to the mirror.
A drawing that uses a scale to make an object larger than the real object is called an enlargement. Enlargements are commonly used in architectural drawings, engineering designs, and map making to represent larger structures or areas in a more manageable size. The scale is typically indicated in the drawing's key or legend to provide a clear understanding of the size relationships.
The only time a smaller object is lighter than a larger object is when it's denser. A smaller iron object is heavier than a somewhat larger wooden object because iron is denser than wood.
Spherical mirrors can form either real or virtual images depending on their design. Concave mirrors can form real images that are inverted if the object is placed beyond the mirror's focal point. Convex mirrors always produce virtual images that are upright and smaller than the actual object. The image characteristics will vary based on the object's distance from the mirror and the type of mirror being used.
The image formed is real, inverted, diminished and on the same side of the mirror as the object is.
4.041 is larger than 4.04