No, ultraviolet light would not be reflected by a regular mirror, as most mirrors are designed to reflect visible light. Specialized mirrors designed to reflect ultraviolet light would be needed for reflection.
It would depend on the distance of the object from the mirror. If the object is close to the mirror, the reflected image may appear brighter due to magnification. However, if the object is far from the mirror, the reflected image may appear darker due to spread out light rays.
The beam of light would be reflected at a 30 degree angle from the normal to the mirror. This means the angle of reflection would also be 30 degrees.
If a glass plate is replaced by a plane mirror, the mirror will reflect an image of the objects in front of it. The mirror will not refract light like the glass plate would, and the reflected image will appear to be at the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
No, a plastic bottle would not produce a reflected image because its surface is not reflective like a mirror. It would only produce a distorted or blurry reflection due to its curved surface.
That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.
The bumpy mirror will reflect the light at a weird angle, not the one you would expect, based on where the light source is coming from. The smooth mirror will act normal
It would depend on the distance of the object from the mirror. If the object is close to the mirror, the reflected image may appear brighter due to magnification. However, if the object is far from the mirror, the reflected image may appear darker due to spread out light rays.
green
The beam of light would be reflected at a 30 degree angle from the normal to the mirror. This means the angle of reflection would also be 30 degrees.
they both can be reflected sound would be reflected as an echo and light like when you flash a flash light at a mirror
If a glass plate is replaced by a plane mirror, the mirror will reflect an image of the objects in front of it. The mirror will not refract light like the glass plate would, and the reflected image will appear to be at the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it.
Your reflection is based on the shape the mirror is.Example:If the mirror was bent outwards the reflected image would appear wider.If the mirror was bent inwards the reflected image would appear thinner.Usually you can commonly find mirrors like these in fun houses, and can be found in various shapes such as cones etc.
No, a plastic bottle would not produce a reflected image because its surface is not reflective like a mirror. It would only produce a distorted or blurry reflection due to its curved surface.
ultraviolet rays, X-rays, and gamma rays would all do that
That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.
An image that appears behind a mirror is created by the reflection of light bouncing back and forth between the mirror and the object being reflected. This phenomenon occurs due to the properties of light reflection, where the image appears to be located behind the mirror even though it is actually in front of it.
No it can not. It would have to be concave or convex(not sure which). A real image would be if you looked at the mirror and on the wall next to you were projected.