When light reflects off an object, it bounces onto the mirror and then back to your eyes, creating an image. The mirror essentially acts as a surface that allows light to reflect off of it, enabling you to see the reflected image.
The image you see in a mirror is a virtual image that appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object in front of the mirror. It is a reflection of the object, with the light rays bouncing off the mirror in a way that creates the illusion of an image appearing to come from the mirror itself.
The reflection that you see in a mirror is called a virtual image. This virtual image appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror. It is formed when light rays reflect off the mirror surface and converge at a point, creating the illusion of an image.
You see a virtual image in the mirror. It appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as your actual self is in front of it.
When you look at yourself in a plane mirror, you see a laterally inverted image of yourself. This means that left and right are switched in the image you see in the mirror, but up and down remain the same.
Light waves are bouncing back from the surface of the mirror. These light waves carry the image of you that you see in the mirror by reflecting the light that hits the mirror back to your eyes.
you can see a image on a mirror because energy bounce off
You see it when your image strikes light and the light bounces off you then off the mirror to your eyes.
To see an upright image of yourself in a concave mirror you must be closer than the principal focus. Hope this helps.
image
yes
The image you see in a mirror is a virtual image that appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object in front of the mirror. It is a reflection of the object, with the light rays bouncing off the mirror in a way that creates the illusion of an image appearing to come from the mirror itself.
The reflection that you see in a mirror is called a virtual image. This virtual image appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as the object is in front of the mirror. It is formed when light rays reflect off the mirror surface and converge at a point, creating the illusion of an image.
You see a virtual image in the mirror. It appears to be behind the mirror at the same distance as your actual self is in front of it.
virtual :-)
When you look at yourself in a plane mirror, you see a laterally inverted image of yourself. This means that left and right are switched in the image you see in the mirror, but up and down remain the same.
A photo. A mirror produces a 'mirror-image'
Light waves are bouncing back from the surface of the mirror. These light waves carry the image of you that you see in the mirror by reflecting the light that hits the mirror back to your eyes.