To determine the location of an image using ray diagrams, you need to draw two rays of light. One ray passes through the focal point before reflecting, and the other ray goes parallel to the principal axis and passes through the focal point after reflecting. The point where these two rays intersect will give you the location of the image.
idk
Since the image is virtual and upright, it is located on the same side as the object. Using the lens formula 1/f = 1/dO + 1/dI, where f is the focal length, dO is the object distance, and dI is the image distance, you can calculate the image distance. Given the object distance (51 mm), object height (13 mm), and image height (3.5 mm), it would be possible to determine the image distance and thus find out the distance from the lens at which the image is located.
2 is the minimum number of light rays required to locate the image (of a point object) formed by a lens. First find the path of rays after refraction and then their point of intersection gives the location of the image.
If you look at something in front of you, light bouncing off that thing enters your eye and you say you can see the object. If now you put a mirror between you and the object, and if you move around you can find a place where you can see it "in the mirror". The object appears to be "through the mirror". The light rays have been bent through angles, but your eye is deceived to believe the object is behind the mirror. It is called a virtual image, because there is nothing to be found at the apparent place where the light appears to come from. That apparent source is called the virtual image. In lenses, the light is bent in such a way that it appears to the eye to come from a place different from the true position of the object. Also a virtual image. Incidentally, when you "see" anything, it is because your eye lens has focused light rays onto your retina. Just like a camera lens focusses onto the image plane (film or sensor chip). That focussed image is a real image. If you look at the sun, it will burn a hole in your retina, the shape of the sun.
The object glass is a lens located at the front of a telescope or microscope that gathers and focuses incoming light from the observed object. It helps produce a sharp and magnified image for the viewer to see.
Draw a line joining a point and its image and find its midpoint. Repeat for another pair of point and its image. The line joining these midpoints is the line of reflection.
the best way to find a draw is take your negative battery cable off and put a test light between the terminal and battery--if their is a draw the light will glow--if it glows then you can start pulling fuses out of the fuse box until the light shuts off and that's the circuit
idk
One can find images of a light wall on Google Images. Simply search "light wall" on Google and click on "images". You can also find picturs of light wall on image storing sites like Imgur,Imageshack and Photobucket.
Since the image is virtual and upright, it is located on the same side as the object. Using the lens formula 1/f = 1/dO + 1/dI, where f is the focal length, dO is the object distance, and dI is the image distance, you can calculate the image distance. Given the object distance (51 mm), object height (13 mm), and image height (3.5 mm), it would be possible to determine the image distance and thus find out the distance from the lens at which the image is located.
Using the expression v/u = Image size / object size we can find the value of v. v = 15 * 3.5/13 = 4 (nearly) So approximately at a distance of 4 mm in front of the lens the image is located on the same side of the object.
This is not something that can be answered without a video demo or by attaching an image. I suggest you find a picture of a pacman ghost, import it into word and then type over the image to get the right shape.
Find a how to draw website
I would go in to google images and type in charlie from good luck charlie and then find an image you like of her. Then print it and maybe trace her?
To find the number of pixels in an image, multiply the width of the image in pixels by the height of the image in pixels. This will give you the total number of pixels in the image.
To find the number of pixels in an image, multiply the width of the image in pixels by the height of the image in pixels. This will give you the total number of pixels in the image.
Draw how u normally draw not how others draw