When an object is placed in front of an upside-down mirror, the reflection will also be upside-down.
When using a concave mirror, the object distance (distance of the object from the mirror) can vary depending on where the object is placed. If the object is located beyond the focal point of the mirror, the object distance will be positive. If the object is placed between the mirror and the focal point, the object distance will be negative.
The image formed by a convex mirror when an object is placed in front of it is virtual, upright, and smaller in size than the object.
When a small object is placed on the principal axis of a concave mirror between the focus and the mirror, a virtual and upright image is formed behind the mirror. The image is magnified and located further away from the mirror than the object.
The object should be placed beyond the focal point of the concave mirror. This will produce a larger, magnified image located behind the mirror. By positioning the object past the focal point, the reflected rays will converge to form an image that is larger compared to the object.
A concave mirror can give a virtual and larger image than the object when the object is placed within the focal length of the mirror. When the object is placed beyond the focal point, a real, inverted, smaller image is formed.
When using a concave mirror, the object distance (distance of the object from the mirror) can vary depending on where the object is placed. If the object is located beyond the focal point of the mirror, the object distance will be positive. If the object is placed between the mirror and the focal point, the object distance will be negative.
The image formed by a convex mirror when an object is placed in front of it is virtual, upright, and smaller in size than the object.
When a small object is placed on the principal axis of a concave mirror between the focus and the mirror, a virtual and upright image is formed behind the mirror. The image is magnified and located further away from the mirror than the object.
The object should be placed beyond the focal point of the concave mirror. This will produce a larger, magnified image located behind the mirror. By positioning the object past the focal point, the reflected rays will converge to form an image that is larger compared to the object.
A concave mirror can give a virtual and larger image than the object when the object is placed within the focal length of the mirror. When the object is placed beyond the focal point, a real, inverted, smaller image is formed.
The object must be placed at a distance equal to the radius of curvature of the concave mirror in order for its image to be at infinity. In this case, the object must be placed 28.6 cm away from the concave mirror.
A real image is formed by a concave mirror when the object is placed beyond the focal point of the mirror. A virtual image is formed when the object is placed between the mirror and the focal point.
Yes, the image in a concave mirror can be larger than the object if the object is placed between the focus and the mirror. This creates a virtual, magnified image.
Yes, a real image can be formed by a concave mirror when the object is placed beyond the focal point. A virtual image can also be formed when the object is placed between the mirror and the focal point.
The object should be placed farther than the focal point of the concave mirror along the principal axis. This will result in a real inverted image that is larger than the object and located beyond the center of curvature of the mirror.
Concave mirror is used to a real image as big as real object. If the object is placed at center of curvature , then real image is formed at the same center of curvature.
The image produced by a plane mirror will be virtual, upright, and the same size as the object. It will appear to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.