The way you have done so is perfectly suitable.
An image is considered magnified if it appears larger than the object, and diminished if it appears smaller. This is determined by comparing the size of the image to the size of the object in relation to the lens or mirror used to create the image.
The image formed by a slide projector on the screen is typically magnified because the light rays from the projector converge before reaching the screen, which causes the image to appear larger than the actual slide.
In a concave mirror, an image is created when light rays that strike the mirror are reflected and converge to a focal point in front of the mirror. This forms either a real or virtual image depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point. The image can be magnified or diminished based on the distance of the object from the mirror.
Real, inverted, and diminished image: If the object is placed beyond the focal point of the convex lens, a real, inverted, and diminished image will be formed on the opposite side of the lens. Virtual, upright, and magnified image: If the object is placed between the focal point and the lens, a virtual, upright, and magnified image will be formed on the same side as the object.
The 6 cases for producing images formed by a concave mirror are: 1) Object beyond C: Real, inverted, diminished image; 2) Object at C: Real, inverted, same size image; 3) Object between C and F: Real, inverted, magnified image; 4) Object at F: No image formed; 5) Object between F and mirror: Virtual, upright, magnified image; 6) Object at infinity: Real, inverted, diminished image at focus.
An image is considered magnified if it appears larger than the object, and diminished if it appears smaller. This is determined by comparing the size of the image to the size of the object in relation to the lens or mirror used to create the image.
Need more information
The image formed by a slide projector on the screen is typically magnified because the light rays from the projector converge before reaching the screen, which causes the image to appear larger than the actual slide.
In a concave mirror, an image is created when light rays that strike the mirror are reflected and converge to a focal point in front of the mirror. This forms either a real or virtual image depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point. The image can be magnified or diminished based on the distance of the object from the mirror.
Real, inverted, and diminished image: If the object is placed beyond the focal point of the convex lens, a real, inverted, and diminished image will be formed on the opposite side of the lens. Virtual, upright, and magnified image: If the object is placed between the focal point and the lens, a virtual, upright, and magnified image will be formed on the same side as the object.
The 6 cases for producing images formed by a concave mirror are: 1) Object beyond C: Real, inverted, diminished image; 2) Object at C: Real, inverted, same size image; 3) Object between C and F: Real, inverted, magnified image; 4) Object at F: No image formed; 5) Object between F and mirror: Virtual, upright, magnified image; 6) Object at infinity: Real, inverted, diminished image at focus.
The magnification number is how close the image is magnified. EX: if the image is being magnified by 400x then it will be a more magnified (closer look) at the image then if it was being magnified by 100x
The image formed by a convex lens depends on the object distance from the lens, the focal length of the lens, and the object size. These factors determine whether the image formed is real or virtual, magnified or diminished, and upright or inverted.
A concave mirror can give a real or virtual magnified image depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point. If the object is beyond the focal point, a real and magnified image is produced; if the object is within the focal point, a virtual and magnified image is produced.
The type of image formed by a lens is determined by the focal length of the lens, the distance between the object and the lens, and the placement of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. Depending on these factors, the image can be real or virtual, upright or inverted, and magnified or diminished.
A concave mirror forms a magnified image when the object is placed beyond the focal point of the mirror.
The image formed by a convex spherical mirror can be either real or virtual, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image is real, inverted, and diminished. If the object is between the mirror and the focal point, the image is virtual, upright, and magnified.