A mirror image is a reflection, where the left and right sides are switched. It is not necessarily an opposite image, as it depends on the context.
A mirror is an object that shows reflection. When light hits the surface of a mirror, it bounces off and creates an image of whatever is in front of it.
"Real" and "virtual" are two opposite, mutually exclusive categories of images. An image is either one or the other, and no image can be both. The image produced by a plane mirror is a virtual one.
A mirror reflects light by causing the photons in the incident light to bounce off the smooth surface of the mirror. The angle at which the light hits the mirror is equal to the angle at which it reflects off, according to the law of reflection. This creates an image of the reflected object or scene.
Only two rays are needed to construct an image by a spherical mirror: one ray parallel to the principal axis that passes through the focal point after reflection, and one ray passing through the focal point before reflection which then becomes parallel to the principal axis after reflection.
Regardless of which side of the mirror you designate as the positive side, one of them is positive and the other one is negative, since the object and image are always on opposite sides of the mirror. BTW ... If the mirror is flat, then their absolute values are equal.
A mirror is an object that shows reflection. When light hits the surface of a mirror, it bounces off and creates an image of whatever is in front of it.
A transformation in which you flip a figure across a mirror line is called a reflection. During this process, each point of the figure is mapped to a corresponding point on the opposite side of the mirror line, maintaining the same distance from the line. This creates a mirror image of the original figure. Reflection is one of the basic geometric transformations, along with translation and rotation.
"Real" and "virtual" are two opposite, mutually exclusive categories of images. An image is either one or the other, and no image can be both. The image produced by a plane mirror is a virtual one.
In addition to the primary image formed by one reflection off the back of the mirror, you may get images formed after two reflections and a total internal refraction: reflection off the back of mirror, refraction on inside of front surface of glass and reflection off back of the mirror. The refraction will only take place at a large angle.
A mirror reflects light by causing the photons in the incident light to bounce off the smooth surface of the mirror. The angle at which the light hits the mirror is equal to the angle at which it reflects off, according to the law of reflection. This creates an image of the reflected object or scene.
Only two rays are needed to construct an image by a spherical mirror: one ray parallel to the principal axis that passes through the focal point after reflection, and one ray passing through the focal point before reflection which then becomes parallel to the principal axis after reflection.
real, inverted and magnification less than one
Regardless of which side of the mirror you designate as the positive side, one of them is positive and the other one is negative, since the object and image are always on opposite sides of the mirror. BTW ... If the mirror is flat, then their absolute values are equal.
of course not! A mirror image would have to have one image of the baby and the second image precisely behind it- and you know that cannot happen in a real uterus! One single image of a baby cannot mirror a second one to the side of it as in fraternal or identical twins. Look in a mirror and move your arms. Does not the arm move preciely in the reflection the same way you are moving it? it may look like two arms to you but its one!!
a mirror... hehe ok ill stop messing around its a light getting reflected off a smooth surface most any smooth surface will reflect something the only thing that can over come a mirrors reflection is light itself and the angle at which it is reflected off (the secret to a one way mirror)
The line of reflection is a line on which a shape is reflected to create its mirror image. It acts as a symmetry line, where each point on one side of the line is mirrored on the other side.
One way to distinguish between a plane concave and convex mirror without touching them is to observe their reflected images. A concave mirror will produce an upright and magnified image of an object placed in front of it, while a convex mirror will produce an upright and diminished image. Another way is to look at the reflection of a distant object – a concave mirror will form a real image, while a convex mirror will create a virtual image.