The brain processes visual information in a way that flips the inverted image right-side up. This process involves the brain interpreting the incoming signals from the eyes and reconstructing the image to appear upright, aligning it with our perception of reality. The complex network of neurons in the visual cortex ensures that we perceive the correct orientation of the image.
Just draw a couple of ray diagrams through a positive lens and you will see that a real image has to end up inverted, just like the image in your eye, which your brain then sorts out to a right-way-up image.
When an image is said to be erect, it means that the image appears in its upright or natural orientation, the same way the object is positioned. This is typical for images produced by convex lenses and concave mirrors when the object is placed beyond their respective focal points.
No, virtual images can be either erect or inverted depending on the type of mirror or lens and the object's position relative to the focal point. Real images are always inverted due to the way light rays converge at the image point.
An inverted image with the eye refers to an image that is formed upside down on the retina of the eye. This happens because light rays coming from an object are refracted by the eye's lens and focused on the retina. The brain then processes this inverted image and interprets it as right side up.
1.Image distance= object distance 2.Size of the image = size of the object 3.image is laterally inverted 4.Image is always virtual & erect
Metaphorically the eye interprets the image, but more precisely it is the brain which interprets the image, and the brain learns to do so in a functional manner. An inverted image would make it harder to understand what you are seeing, so the brain rotates it to be erect.
If the image is upside up view of the given object than it is called Inverted Image. If it remains as the object than it is called Erect Image
The image formed at the retina is always real and inverted but the brain interprets it as erect. the object you see will not be inverted.
The image is inverted when it reaches the retina. The brain then interperets the image as right-side-up.
The image formed on the retina is actually inverted due to the way light rays refract in the eye. The brain processes this inverted image and flips it back upright to create a coherent visual perception.
Inverted
Just draw a couple of ray diagrams through a positive lens and you will see that a real image has to end up inverted, just like the image in your eye, which your brain then sorts out to a right-way-up image.
because one side is concave and the other is convex
When an image is said to be erect, it means that the image appears in its upright or natural orientation, the same way the object is positioned. This is typical for images produced by convex lenses and concave mirrors when the object is placed beyond their respective focal points.
No, virtual images can be either erect or inverted depending on the type of mirror or lens and the object's position relative to the focal point. Real images are always inverted due to the way light rays converge at the image point.
-- You don't 'see' a virtual image, unless it somehow continues to your eye and forms a real image there. -- The image formed on the light-sensitive surface of your eye is, as you said, real and inverted. The brain does a neat job of interpreting it as an erect image. When experimental subjects are fitted with glasses that invert the image before it enters the eye, so that it arrives at the retina upside-down, the subject's brain is able to make the correction within a few hours and everything works fine again.
Actually, they don't. The image on the retina is inverted, and the brain takes care of it. The brain is really quite amazing in its ability to make allowance for that kind of thing. When research volunteers are are fitted with glasses that invert everything, they're typically able to adapt and function normally within a few hours.