The light reflecting off of it in your line of site
yes.
A converging mirror, such as a concave mirror, can produce real and inverted images for objects located beyond the focal point, or virtual and upright images for objects located between the focal point and the mirror. The size of the image can be larger or smaller than the object depending on its position relative to the mirror.
Both are real objects which produce false images.
Plane and convex mirrors produce only virtual images.
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.
The reflectivity of a mirror affects its ability to produce clear and sharp images by determining how much light is reflected back to the viewer. A mirror with high reflectivity will produce a clearer and sharper image because it reflects more light, resulting in a brighter and more detailed reflection. Conversely, a mirror with low reflectivity will produce a dimmer and less detailed image.
A concave mirror can produce only virtual images that are the same size as the object when the object is placed at the focal point of the mirror. This is known as the case of magnification of +1.
there is an imaginary point in front of the concave mirror, called the focal point or focus, which is half the length of the radius of the sphere of which the mirror was a part of(radius of curvature). usually an object if seen in between the mirror and focus gets magnified, beyond the focus, it gets inverted and reduced.
Plane mirrors produce virtual images that are laterally inverted, meaning the left side appears as right and vice versa. These images appear to be the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front.
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.
A convex lens is more like a concave mirror in the way it produces images. A convex lens converges light rays to form real or virtual images, much like how a concave mirror can do the same by reflecting light. Both convex lenses and concave mirrors can produce both real and virtual images depending on the object's position relative to the lens or mirror.
Concave mirrors can produce real images when the object is placed beyond the focal point of the mirror. This type of mirror converges light rays to a point, creating a real image that can be projected onto a screen.