A virtual image can be seen on a screen when the light rays from the object converge to form the image on the screen, even though the image is not actually located at that point.
An image that can be seen but not projected on a screen is called a real image. Real images are formed when light rays converge at a point, creating a visible image that can be observed with the naked eye. They are not able to be projected onto a screen like virtual images.
virtual image ( not on screen, brain interpreting)
Yes, a virtual image can be projected onto a screen by using a converging lens or a concave mirror. This type of image appears to be located behind the mirror or lens, as the light rays do not actually converge at the position of the image. By placing a screen at the location of the virtual image, the image can be displayed.
You can't determine whether an image is real or virtual just by looking at it on a screen - both types can appear identical. To determine if an image is real or virtual, you would need additional information such as its source or creation process.
A plain mirror produces a virtual image. This means the image appears to be behind the mirror and cannot be projected onto a screen.
Definitely possible to photograph it. But you cannot catch the image on a screen but virtual image can be seen by eyes. So photograph too is possible.
An image that can be seen but not projected on a screen is called a real image. Real images are formed when light rays converge at a point, creating a visible image that can be observed with the naked eye. They are not able to be projected onto a screen like virtual images.
A virtual image in optics is an image that is formed where light appears to converge, but does not physically intersect. This type of image cannot be projected onto a screen because it is perceived to be located behind the mirror or lens that produced it.
If an image can be formed on screen it is classified as real. Virtual images cannot be projected on an image.
Real images can be obtained on the screen,whereas virtual images can't be obtained on the screen
virtual image ( not on screen, brain interpreting)
Yes, a virtual image can be projected onto a screen by using a converging lens or a concave mirror. This type of image appears to be located behind the mirror or lens, as the light rays do not actually converge at the position of the image. By placing a screen at the location of the virtual image, the image can be displayed.
You can't determine whether an image is real or virtual just by looking at it on a screen - both types can appear identical. To determine if an image is real or virtual, you would need additional information such as its source or creation process.
you are contradicting yourself here. a virtual image is VIRTUAL. meaning it technically doesn't exist, (though you can manipulate the light to see it) its focus exists beyond the plane of view and therefore you can't see it. to better explain this, pictures do a whole lot more, search for concave and convex lenses and compare the refraction of an image that you get
A plain mirror produces a virtual image. This means the image appears to be behind the mirror and cannot be projected onto a screen.
A real image is formed when light rays actually converge at a point, creating an image that can be projected onto a screen. A virtual image, on the other hand, is formed by the apparent intersection of the extended light rays, and cannot be projected onto a screen.
No, a virtual image cannot be photographed because it only exists as an apparent position where light rays appear to converge or diverge when viewed through a lens or mirror. It does not actually exist in physical space to be captured by a camera.