The image is formed behind the mirror at the same distance as the object's reflection from the mirror's surface. This is due to reflection of light rays from the object off the mirror's surface.
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.
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.
When you look into the corner formed by two mirrors, you see a repeated reflection of the same image bouncing back and forth between the two mirrors. The image does not appear reversed because each mirror creates a mirror image that is already reversed, resulting in multiple reflections that cancel out the reversal effect.
The image that you see when you look in a mirror is a reflection of the light that bounces off of you and back into your eyes. This creates the illusion that your image is located behind the mirror, when in reality it is in front of it.
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.
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.
to look at yourself, to see something in mirror-image (backwards), to see something on the back of your body.
While seeing at the mirror from a distance be sure that you image should be very clear not like liquifyed or something...
When you look into the corner formed by two mirrors, you see a repeated reflection of the same image bouncing back and forth between the two mirrors. The image does not appear reversed because each mirror creates a mirror image that is already reversed, resulting in multiple reflections that cancel out the reversal effect.
When U look in the mirror and see something you are dissatisfied with, when what you see is not what others see.
If light hits a mirror at an angle it reflects back at you but it will make the image look bigger or smaller (if the mirror is concave or convex). If it is a flat plane mirror the image is the same but if your holding something it will be on the opposite side
mirror mean: when you look through it you can see a reflection of your self.
The image that you see when you look in a mirror is a reflection of the light that bounces off of you and back into your eyes. This creates the illusion that your image is located behind the mirror, when in reality it is in front of it.
When the incident light rays are falling towards the mirror in such a way that the light rays after falling on the mirror meet at any point in front of the mirror than an image is formed in front of the mirror which can be taken on a screen and as the image can be taken on a screen it is known as a real image. So, plane mirrors can form real images.
mirage mirror it's self!