It is not possible to do this with a convex mirror. If the mirror is concave you just have be twice the focal length away from the surface of the mirror or more.
A typical cosmetic mirror is flat or slightly convex, allowing for a clear and accurate reflection of one's face. A concave mirror, on the other hand, would cause the reflection to appear upside-down and distorted.
No, a convex mirror does not produce an upside-down image. Convex mirrors always produce virtual, upright, and diminished images of objects placed in front of them.
When an object is placed in front of an upside-down mirror, the reflection will also be upside-down.
What a nice question. These two different images illustrate the difference between a reflection from a concave and a convex surface. However, if you look in a concave beauty/shaving mirror, you'll still find the image erect. For you will be closer to the mirror than the length of its focus. Enlarged a little indeed.
This image is always located in front of the lens.
A typical cosmetic mirror is flat or slightly convex, allowing for a clear and accurate reflection of one's face. A concave mirror, on the other hand, would cause the reflection to appear upside-down and distorted.
No, a convex mirror does not produce an upside-down image. Convex mirrors always produce virtual, upright, and diminished images of objects placed in front of them.
because the light travels str8 and if it hits a curved reflection your eves will follow there fore it looks upside down Because its a convex mirror. A regular mirror shifts everything from left to right but a convex mirror reverses on a horizontal plane versus a vertical plane.
When an object is placed in front of an upside-down mirror, the reflection will also be upside-down.
Well when a word is shown in front of a mirror the reflection of the word upside down. This is called mirror image.
If our image is real and inverted and smaller than the object ,then it is a concave mirror; if the image is virtual and erect and larger than the object,then it is a convex mirror; if the image is of the same size as of the object,it is a plane mirror. that is how we can distinguish or identify which of the given mirrors are what. BUT if the angle is very small you cannot tell Plane is flat, convex it curves outwards and concave it curves inwards.
What a nice question. These two different images illustrate the difference between a reflection from a concave and a convex surface. However, if you look in a concave beauty/shaving mirror, you'll still find the image erect. For you will be closer to the mirror than the length of its focus. Enlarged a little indeed.
its because the lens of the microscope is convex. this means that it is curved a little bit, like the lenses of glasses. this causes the image to appear upside down. try looking into the curved part of a spoon from both sides. one side your reflection is normal, but on the other side your reflection is upside down, because of concave and convex. The side where you see your reflection normal is concave, and the side where it is backwards is convex. hope i helped!
You'd actually see your upside-down reflection in the bowl of a spoon (the part where the food goes); any reflection you see on the opposite side will always be upright. The inside of a spoon acts as a concave mirror, which have the interesting property of creating an inverted image when the object being reflected is located outside the focal point. If you hold the spoon as close to your face as you can, you'd see your reflection upright.
This image is always located in front of the lens.
You must stand closer to the converging mirror than its focal point. This position will allow the converging mirror to produce an inverted image of yourself.
It is called a virtual, upright, and diminished image. This occurs when the object is placed beyond the focal point of a concave mirror or between a convex mirror and the focal point.