They converge in the focus of the lens. It can be, of course, real or imaginary (it depends on if the lens is concave or convex, respectively).
The mirror that causes parallel incident rays of light to converge at the focus is a concave mirror. This type of mirror is curved inward and has a reflective surface that causes light rays to converge towards a focal point when they strike the mirror parallel to its principal axis.
-- The distance from the center of the lens to the plane in which the rays converge is the 'focal length' of the lens. -- If the rays emanated from one point on an object, then rays from all the other points on the object do the same thing, and a real image is formed.
When light hits a concave mirror parallel to the principal axis, the reflected light rays converge at the focal point of the mirror.
No. The angle of incidence will equal the angle of reflection. No convergence will take place.
The focus of a concave mirror is the point where parallel rays of light converge after reflecting off the mirror. It is located along the principal axis, halfway between the vertex and the center of curvature of the mirror. Rays of light that are parallel to the principal axis will reflect and converge at the focus.
The mirror that causes parallel incident rays of light to converge at the focus is a concave mirror. This type of mirror is curved inward and has a reflective surface that causes light rays to converge towards a focal point when they strike the mirror parallel to its principal axis.
-- The distance from the center of the lens to the plane in which the rays converge is the 'focal length' of the lens. -- If the rays emanated from one point on an object, then rays from all the other points on the object do the same thing, and a real image is formed.
This depends on the type of lens. If it is a convex lens then they converge at the focus on the other side of the lens. If it is a concave lens, then they diverge and appear to be coming from the focus present on the same side of the lens as the incident ray.
When light hits a concave mirror parallel to the principal axis, the reflected light rays converge at the focal point of the mirror.
No. The angle of incidence will equal the angle of reflection. No convergence will take place.
The focus of a concave mirror is the point where parallel rays of light converge after reflecting off the mirror. It is located along the principal axis, halfway between the vertex and the center of curvature of the mirror. Rays of light that are parallel to the principal axis will reflect and converge at the focus.
The principal focus of a convex mirror is the point where incident light rays parallel to the mirror's axis converge upon reflection. It is located behind the mirror and is used to define the focal length and to determine the image formation properties of the mirror.
The principal focus of a convex mirror is the point where light rays parallel to the mirror's principal axis appear to converge after reflection. This point is located behind the mirror at a distance equal to half the radius of curvature of the mirror.
When a plane wavefront is incident normally on a convex lens, the refracted wavefront will converge towards the principal focus of the lens. This is because the convex lens causes the light rays to converge, focusing them at a point. The refracted wavefront will exhibit a shape that is curved inward towards the principal focus.
Any incident ray traveling parallel to the principal axis of a converging lens will refract through the lens and travel through the focal point on the opposite side of the lens.Any incident ray traveling through the focal point on the way to the lens will refract through the lens and travel parallel to the principal axis.An incident ray that passes through the center of the lens will in effect continue in the same direction that it had when it entered the lens.
The mirror is a concave mirror. This behavior is a property of concave mirrors, where parallel rays of light are reflected and converge at the principal focus after reflection.
They make the light rays converge to a point. Parallel rays converge at the focal point of the lens