a plane mirror (flat)
A concave mirror forms a virtual and erect image for all positions of the object when the object is placed between the focal point and the mirror. In this scenario, the reflected rays diverge, creating an upright and virtual image that appears behind the mirror.
A convex mirror forms a virtual image. The reflected rays diverge away from each other, and when extended backward, they appear to meet at a point behind the mirror. This virtual image is always upright and smaller than the object.
A convex mirror forms a virtual, upright, and diminished image of the object placed in front of it. The image is also located behind the mirror.
In a concave lens the object always forms a virtual image. The convex lens also forms a virtual image.
A plane mirror forms 1 virtual image and no real image. The virtual image is behind the mirror, at the same distance as the object in front of the mirror, erect, in mirror image left-right.
A concave mirror forms a virtual and erect image for all positions of the object when the object is placed between the focal point and the mirror. In this scenario, the reflected rays diverge, creating an upright and virtual image that appears behind the mirror.
A convex mirror forms a virtual image. The reflected rays diverge away from each other, and when extended backward, they appear to meet at a point behind the mirror. This virtual image is always upright and smaller than the object.
A convex mirror forms a virtual, upright, and diminished image of the object placed in front of it. The image is also located behind the mirror.
In a concave lens the object always forms a virtual image. The convex lens also forms a virtual image.
A plane mirror forms 1 virtual image and no real image. The virtual image is behind the mirror, at the same distance as the object in front of the mirror, erect, in mirror image left-right.
When the object is placed between the focal point and the mirror in a concave mirror, an enlarged virtual image equal in size to the object is formed. In this case, the image distance is greater than the object distance, and the image is virtual, upright, and magnified.
Here is a description of image formation in a concave mirror: if the object is beyond the center of curvature (F), the image formed is real and upside down; if the object is very near to the concave mirror, the image forms behind the mirror. It is virtual, upright, and bigger in size. Here is a description of image formation in a convex mirror: a convex mirror always produces a virtual, upright, and smaller image of the object at any distance in front of it. The image is located behind the mirror.
A concave mirror forms a real or virtual image, depending on the object's distance from the mirror and the mirror's focal length.
No, modern aircraft do not have mirrors. With the exception of fighter aircraft which have them for tactical purposes. The general reason being 90% of airplanes cannot move in reverse. The Airbus A-380 does have a rear viewing camera due to its supreme size. in the bathroom.
The image formed by a plane mirror is virtual, erect, same size as object, and laterally inverted ( left side appears right and right side appears left ). Also, the virtual image is as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of the mirror.
A plane mirror doesn't 'really' form an image at all. The image is 'virtual', not 'real'. You see what appears to be an image. It's located at the same distance behind the reflecting surface as the actual object is in front of it. If a real image exists, you can always put a piece of frosted glass, photo-film, or tissue paper where the image is, and capture it. You can't do that with a plane mirror.
A concave mirror can form a virtual diminished image when the object is placed between the focal point and the mirror's vertex. This setup causes the reflected rays to diverge and form an upright image that appears smaller than the actual object.