No, a convex mirror does not produce an upside-down image. Convex mirrors always produce virtual, upright, and diminished images of objects placed in front of them.
To see an upside-down reflection of yourself in a convex mirror, you would need to stand closer to the mirror within the focal point. The image formed in a convex mirror is always virtual, upright, and smaller in size compared to the object.
This image is always located in front of the lens.
It is called a virtual, upright, and diminished image. This occurs when the object is placed beyond the focal point of a concave mirror or between a convex mirror and the focal point.
Here is a description of image formation in a concave mirror: if the object is beyond the center of curvature (F), the image formed is real and upside down; if the object is very near to the concave mirror, the image forms behind the mirror. It is virtual, upright, and bigger in size. Here is a description of image formation in a convex mirror: a convex mirror always produces a virtual, upright, and smaller image of the object at any distance in front of it. The image is located behind the mirror.
No, a plane mirror does not flip an image upside down. It produces a mirror image that is laterally inverted, meaning left and right are switched, but top and bottom remain the same.
To see an upside-down reflection of yourself in a convex mirror, you would need to stand closer to the mirror within the focal point. The image formed in a convex mirror is always virtual, upright, and smaller in size compared to the object.
it is convex
This image is always located in front of the lens.
convex lens
It is called a virtual, upright, and diminished image. This occurs when the object is placed beyond the focal point of a concave mirror or between a convex mirror and the focal point.
concave
Here is a description of image formation in a concave mirror: if the object is beyond the center of curvature (F), the image formed is real and upside down; if the object is very near to the concave mirror, the image forms behind the mirror. It is virtual, upright, and bigger in size. Here is a description of image formation in a convex mirror: a convex mirror always produces a virtual, upright, and smaller image of the object at any distance in front of it. The image is located behind the mirror.
No, a plane mirror does not flip an image upside down. It produces a mirror image that is laterally inverted, meaning left and right are switched, but top and bottom remain the same.
Well when a word is shown in front of a mirror the reflection of the word upside down. This is called mirror image.
If our image is real and inverted and smaller than the object ,then it is a concave mirror; if the image is virtual and erect and larger than the object,then it is a convex mirror; if the image is of the same size as of the object,it is a plane mirror. that is how we can distinguish or identify which of the given mirrors are what. BUT if the angle is very small you cannot tell Plane is flat, convex it curves outwards and concave it curves inwards.
A convex lens
A convex lens can make an object look upside down when the object is placed closer to the lens than its focal point, resulting in a virtual image being formed. This virtual image is then magnified by the lens, causing the observer to perceive the object as upside down.