The image formed in a plane mirror will appear to be the same size as the object, located the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and laterally inverted (left and right reversed). The image will look like a virtual reflection of the object.
The image formed by a convex mirror is virtual, upright, and smaller than the actual object. It appears to be located behind the mirror and has a wider field of view compared to a plane mirror.
No, the reflecting surface of a sculpture is typically not a plane surface like that of a plane mirror. It often has irregularities, textures, and contours that can distort the reflected image or create unique reflections.
When the object is far away from a concave mirror, the image formed is real, inverted, and highly magnified. This image is formed at the focal point of the mirror.
To do this get a plane mirror and two pins. 1.place the first pin in front of the mirror and let it stand firmly. 2.the second pin would act like a search pin-move it until it coincide with the image of the first pin. 3.avoid error due to parallax in 2 4.read the distance of the first pin from the mirror and now the second from behind the mirror,you will find out they are approximately the same since you can't do it perfectly at home. 5.Any small object can also be used
If a glass plate is replaced by a plane mirror, the mirror will reflect an image of the objects in front of it. The mirror will not refract light like the glass plate would, and the reflected image will appear to be at the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
The image formed by a convex mirror is virtual, upright, and smaller than the actual object. It appears to be located behind the mirror and has a wider field of view compared to a plane mirror.
No, the reflecting surface of a sculpture is typically not a plane surface like that of a plane mirror. It often has irregularities, textures, and contours that can distort the reflected image or create unique reflections.
When the object is far away from a concave mirror, the image formed is real, inverted, and highly magnified. This image is formed at the focal point of the mirror.
Concave: a curved like a segment of the interior of a circle or hollow sphere; hollow and curved Convex:having a surface that is curved or rounded outwards plane-a flat mirror
An Image is formed only when there is parallel reflection of light rays that falls on the surface..... Like in Mirror, the surface is plane, while in case of Paper, the surface is irregular or zic zag and hence the reflected rays are not parallel to each other and so no image is formed.
To do this get a plane mirror and two pins. 1.place the first pin in front of the mirror and let it stand firmly. 2.the second pin would act like a search pin-move it until it coincide with the image of the first pin. 3.avoid error due to parallax in 2 4.read the distance of the first pin from the mirror and now the second from behind the mirror,you will find out they are approximately the same since you can't do it perfectly at home. 5.Any small object can also be used
If a glass plate is replaced by a plane mirror, the mirror will reflect an image of the objects in front of it. The mirror will not refract light like the glass plate would, and the reflected image will appear to be at the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
An upright, inverted image of the letter R. Much like this - я
Yes its like a normal mirror close up but furthur back it is upside down.
No, it will not, this is because a plane mirror has no focal point. It's rays never converge at a single point like a concave mirror, and therefore it has no focal point The mirror equation is 1/f=1/di + 1/do, where f is the focal point, di is the distance of the image from the mirror, and do is the distance of the reflected object from the mirror. Since focal point is required for the equation, it can't work. Hope this helps.
A mirror is a reflection; an image.
Symmetry