I can see my reflection in the mirror, which is an image of my face, located behind the mirror's surface. The image appears to be at the same distance behind the mirror as my actual face is in front of the mirror.
A plane flat mirror is a mirror with a flat reflective surface that creates an image by reflection. It reflects light without distorting the shape of the reflected object, creating a virtual image that appears to be the same size as the object being reflected. These mirrors are commonly used in everyday situations such as in bathrooms and dressing rooms.
The surface of a metal spoon is not perfectly flat like a mirror, so it causes light to reflect in different directions, leading to a distorted image. The curvature and imperfections in the spoon's surface scatter light rather than reflect it uniformly, creating a warped reflection.
think of a really shiney piece of silver... if you look in it you'll see your reflection pretty clear right? well if you have a really expensive and nice mirror than usually it will have polished silver covered in glass as the mirror. so basically all you have to do is have a shiney piece of metal (preferably silver) and polish it so you can see yourself... and there you go... a clear image.
When water is still, its surface is smooth and acts like a mirror, reflecting the surroundings. When water is disturbed, ripples and waves form, breaking up the smooth surface and preventing a clear reflection. The disturbance causes the light to scatter in different directions, making it harder for an image to form on the surface.
Words appear different when held up to a mirror because the mirror reflects images as a mirror image, causing the text to appear backwards. This occurs because the mirror reverses the direction of the light that bounces off the text before it reaches our eyes.
this the image the organization think the public have of the company
Eyepiece, Primary Mirror, Secondary Mirror, Prime Focus.
In optics, a virtual image is an image in which the outgoing rays from a point on the object never actually intersect at a visable point. However, if these rays were stretched out they would intersect at a point behind the mirror/surface.
A plane flat mirror is a mirror with a flat reflective surface that creates an image by reflection. It reflects light without distorting the shape of the reflected object, creating a virtual image that appears to be the same size as the object being reflected. These mirrors are commonly used in everyday situations such as in bathrooms and dressing rooms.
Basically your image becomes magnified. I'm not sure about this, but I think the image produced is a "virtual image"
I think you are referring to VNC.
i think that acceleration is directly proportional to surface tension.....
The surface of a metal spoon is not perfectly flat like a mirror, so it causes light to reflect in different directions, leading to a distorted image. The curvature and imperfections in the spoon's surface scatter light rather than reflect it uniformly, creating a warped reflection.
its either reflecting i think!! im not sure!!
A concave mirror will tend to "focus" light to some degree, depending on the curvature of the mirror. A parabolic mirror will bring reflected light to a sharp focus, and telescopes use this type of curve for the shape of their reflective surface. And for exactly the reasons you think they do. Want links? You got 'em....
think of a really shiney piece of silver... if you look in it you'll see your reflection pretty clear right? well if you have a really expensive and nice mirror than usually it will have polished silver covered in glass as the mirror. so basically all you have to do is have a shiney piece of metal (preferably silver) and polish it so you can see yourself... and there you go... a clear image.
When water is still, its surface is smooth and acts like a mirror, reflecting the surroundings. When water is disturbed, ripples and waves form, breaking up the smooth surface and preventing a clear reflection. The disturbance causes the light to scatter in different directions, making it harder for an image to form on the surface.