Yes, but it doesn't just float there in thin air. You need something there to make the
image show up, such as smoke, tissue paper, fog, steam, ground (frosted) glass, etc.
If you don't have any of those, you can take a short-focus eyepiece and look at the
focal point with it. In the eyepiece, you'll see the image at the focal point. (It won't
look like an image. It'll look like the object.)
True
focal
According to the Physics Classroom, "When the object is located at the focal point, no image is formed."http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/refrn/Lesson-5/Converging-Lenses-Object-Image-Relations
c virtual,upright,and larger than the object.
A converging lens is a simple magnifying glass when the object is within one focal length of the lens. The image is then virtual, magnified, and right-side up.
Converging lens is a convex lens.
All of the light entering the lens converges on the other side to a single point, the lens' focal point.
According to the Physics Classroom, "When the object is located at the focal point, no image is formed."http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/refrn/Lesson-5/Converging-Lenses-Object-Image-Relations
c virtual,upright,and larger than the object.
to capture the object
The function of lens is to to form an image of an object by converging or diverging rays of light from the object.
A converging lens is a simple magnifying glass when the object is within one focal length of the lens. The image is then virtual, magnified, and right-side up.
A converging lens is thin at the ends and thick in the middle. It is called converging because the rays of light passing through it, if parallel, converge at a point the other side. A magnifying glass uses a converging lens.
A converging lens is thin at the ends and thick in the middle. It is called converging because the rays of light passing through it, if parallel, converge at a point the other side. A magnifying glass uses a converging lens.
Converging lens is a convex lens.
All of the light entering the lens converges on the other side to a single point, the lens' focal point.
farther then f from the lens
Converging or Converging Lens
If the object is more distant from the lens than the focal length of the lens, a real image is formed.