A magnified, virtual, and upright image is formed in a spoon due to reflection. The curved shape of the spoon acts as a concave mirror, causing light rays to converge and reflect off its inner surface, creating an image that appears larger than the actual object.
When light rays reflect off a concave surface like a spoon, they converge to a point before diverging again. This causes the image to be inverted. The curved shape of the spoon causes the rays to cross at a point, which flips the image upside down due to the reversal of the light rays.
When light rays hit the concave side of a shiny spoon, they are reflected and converge to form an upright, virtual, and magnified image. This image appears behind the spoon's reflective surface, in the same orientation as the object being reflected.
A plane mirror produces an upright and reversed image.
An image that is formed when light rays meet is called a real image. This type of image is formed when light rays converge to a point either on a screen or a surface.
A virtual and upright image is formed if the magnification is negative (-4.6) when using a lens.
erect image.
Apostle Spoon
An apostle spoon.
Real image
When light rays reflect off a concave surface like a spoon, they converge to a point before diverging again. This causes the image to be inverted. The curved shape of the spoon causes the rays to cross at a point, which flips the image upside down due to the reversal of the light rays.
When light rays hit the concave side of a shiny spoon, they are reflected and converge to form an upright, virtual, and magnified image. This image appears behind the spoon's reflective surface, in the same orientation as the object being reflected.
A plane mirror produces an upright and reversed image.
An image that is formed when light rays meet is called a real image. This type of image is formed when light rays converge to a point either on a screen or a surface.
an enlarged, upside-down virual image.
A virtual and upright image is formed if the magnification is negative (-4.6) when using a lens.
The image formed by a plane mirror is virtual, upright, and laterally inverted.
The image formed when light rays actually meet is called a real image. This type of image can be projected onto a screen and is formed when the rays of light actually converge at a point.