Remote sensing or perhaps spying.
The size of the image will depend on the distance between the object and the lens (or mirror) producing the image. If you provide information about this distance, we can help calculate the size of the image.
The image distance is the distance from the lens to where the image is formed, while the object distance is the distance from the lens to the object. In general, for real images, the image distance is different from the object distance. For virtual images, the image distance is negative and the object distance is positive.
No, the size of the image does not increase as the image distance increases. The size of the image is determined by the object distance, focal length of the lens, and the distance between the lens and the image plane.
Moving the object away from the lens increases the object-image distance. According to the thin lens equation, as the object-image distance increases, the image distance increases incrementally more than the object distance. This results in a smaller image size due to the inverse relationship between image size and image distance.
If 'f' is the focal length of the lens, and 'o' is the distance between the lens and the object, then the distance between the lens and the image is: ('f' times 'o') divided by ('o' minus 'f')
There is not enough information to answer the question.
The size of the image will depend on the distance between the object and the lens (or mirror) producing the image. If you provide information about this distance, we can help calculate the size of the image.
The image distance is the distance from the lens to where the image is formed, while the object distance is the distance from the lens to the object. In general, for real images, the image distance is different from the object distance. For virtual images, the image distance is negative and the object distance is positive.
No, the size of the image does not increase as the image distance increases. The size of the image is determined by the object distance, focal length of the lens, and the distance between the lens and the image plane.
image distance is the distance from the point of incidence on the mirror, the where the image is reflected to.object distance is the distance from the actual object being reflected to the point of incidence on the mirror where it's reflected as an image.
More information, or an image, is required to answer this question.
the image distance will appear the same
Moving the object away from the lens increases the object-image distance. According to the thin lens equation, as the object-image distance increases, the image distance increases incrementally more than the object distance. This results in a smaller image size due to the inverse relationship between image size and image distance.
SID stands for Source to Image Distance. This is the distance between the source of photons (anode) and the image receptor.
If 'f' is the focal length of the lens, and 'o' is the distance between the lens and the object, then the distance between the lens and the image is: ('f' times 'o') divided by ('o' minus 'f')
To obtain this type of numerical information, it is necessary to use the Mirror Equation . The mirror equation expresses the quantitative relationship between the object distance (do), the image distance (di), and the focal length (f). The equation is stated as follows:1/f =1/d0 + 1/d1.
when dealing with a flat mirror object-distance and image-distance should be equal.