Plane mirrors produce virtual and upright images that are the same size as the object being reflected. The images are laterally inverted, meaning they are flipped horizontally.
A concave mirror is dished in ward. A convex mirror domed. Both images will be distorted in size from actuality. A convex mirror will give a wider view of what you are looking at in the mirror. A concave mirror will compress and magnify the image being viewed.
Concave mirrors can produce both real and virtual images. Real images are formed when reflected light rays physically converge to a point, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to diverge from a point behind the mirror. The size and orientation of the image depend on the position of the object relative to the mirror's focal point.
Plane Mirror - are standard, flat mirrors, produce images of the same size and distance as the objects they reflect Concave Mirror - Used to focus light, they reflect it inward toward one focal point. Concave mirrors show different types of images, depending on the distance between the mirror and the object reflected. Concave mirrors are used quite frequently in day-to-day life
Two types of images produced by mirrors are real images and virtual images. Real images are formed when light rays actually pass through a point, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to be coming from a point but do not actually pass through it.
In the plane mirror, our image will be seen as same size of us and erect. In case of concave mirror, our image will be inverted. This is because concave mirror forms real, inverted image when object is placed behind the focus of the mirror. In case of convex mirror, the size of the image will be diminished, or smaller than us and the image will be erect too. This is because the image formed is virtual and erect.
Real images
A concave mirror can show both vitual and real images, a plane mirror can show virtual and so can a convex mirror. 0.0
plane mirror
A concave mirror is dished in ward. A convex mirror domed. Both images will be distorted in size from actuality. A convex mirror will give a wider view of what you are looking at in the mirror. A concave mirror will compress and magnify the image being viewed.
real and virtual images
Virtual and real images
Different mirrors form different types of images. A convex mirror forms smaller, upright, and virtual images. They are also located behind the mirror.
Real and virtual.
Superimposable mirror images are mirror images that can be placed on top of each other and perfectly overlap, resulting in the same molecule or object. These types of mirror images are known as "identical" or "superimposable" because they are the same in terms of spatial arrangement, chirality, and configuration. In chemistry, superimposable mirror images are referred to as enantiomers.
Concave mirrors can produce both real and virtual images. Real images are formed when reflected light rays physically converge to a point, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to diverge from a point behind the mirror. The size and orientation of the image depend on the position of the object relative to the mirror's focal point.
Plane Mirror - are standard, flat mirrors, produce images of the same size and distance as the objects they reflect Concave Mirror - Used to focus light, they reflect it inward toward one focal point. Concave mirrors show different types of images, depending on the distance between the mirror and the object reflected. Concave mirrors are used quite frequently in day-to-day life
Two types of images produced by mirrors are real images and virtual images. Real images are formed when light rays actually pass through a point, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to be coming from a point but do not actually pass through it.