The object should be placed beyond the focal point of the concave mirror, between the focal point and the center of curvature. This positioning will result in the formation of a real, inverted, magnified image that is located beyond the object's initial position.
Real images produced by concave mirrors are inverted, while those produced by convex mirrors are typically upright. This occurs because light rays converge to form the real image in concave mirrors, resulting in an inversion of the image.
Any ray that travels parallel to the principal axis of a concave mirror will reflect through the mirror's focus after reflection. This is known as the "law of reflection" for concave mirrors.
Yes, a concave mirror can show a laterally inverted image. This means that the left side of the object appears on the right side of the image and vice versa. This is due to the reflection properties of concave mirrors.
Images in both concave and convex mirrors are virtual and may be upright or inverted depending on the object's position relative to the focal point. Additionally, the size of the image may be magnified, reduced, or equal to the object size.
The three kinds of mirrors are plane mirrors, concave mirrors, and convex mirrors. Plane mirrors reflect a virtual image that is upright and the same size as the object. Concave mirrors reflect both real and virtual images, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. Convex mirrors always reflect virtual images that are smaller and upright.
Real images produced by concave mirrors are inverted, while those produced by convex mirrors are typically upright. This occurs because light rays converge to form the real image in concave mirrors, resulting in an inversion of the image.
Any ray that travels parallel to the principal axis of a concave mirror will reflect through the mirror's focus after reflection. This is known as the "law of reflection" for concave mirrors.
Yes, a concave mirror can show a laterally inverted image. This means that the left side of the object appears on the right side of the image and vice versa. This is due to the reflection properties of concave mirrors.
Images in both concave and convex mirrors are virtual and may be upright or inverted depending on the object's position relative to the focal point. Additionally, the size of the image may be magnified, reduced, or equal to the object size.
The three kinds of mirrors are plane mirrors, concave mirrors, and convex mirrors. Plane mirrors reflect a virtual image that is upright and the same size as the object. Concave mirrors reflect both real and virtual images, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. Convex mirrors always reflect virtual images that are smaller and upright.
No, an image formed by a convex mirror is always virtual and upright. Concave mirrors can form both real and inverted images.
Concave Vs Convex 1. Mercury coating will be made on the convex side but here on concave side. So reflecting portion would become concave and here convex 2. Both real and virtual images but only virtual images 3. Both diminished, enlarged and even same size images formed but only diminished. 4. Both inverted (real) and erect (virtual) images but only erect images. 5. Used as shaving mirror and in telescopes but used as rear view mirror
the image will be Unreal. Concave mirrors form a real and inverted image where in tn convex mirrors the images are unreal.
True. Real images formed by concave mirrors can be either upright or inverted, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point.
Yes, real images produced by concave mirrors are laterally inverted. This means that the left side of the object appears on the right side of the image, and vice versa.
You can find concave mirrors in museums and microscopes
In converging mirrors (such as concave mirrors), the images formed can be real or virtual, depending on the object distance. The image is typically magnified and can be either upright or inverted. In diverging mirrors (such as convex mirrors), the image is always virtual, upright, and reduced in size.