The image that you see when you look in a mirror is a reflection of the light that bounces off of you and back into your eyes. This creates the illusion that your image is located behind the mirror, when in reality it is in front of it.
When you look in the mirror, your brain processes the visual information to recognize your own reflection. This can trigger self-awareness, emotional reactions, and self-evaluation. Looking in the mirror may also play a role in how we perceive and construct our self-image and identity.
When you bring the flashlight closer to the concave mirror, the image will also move closer to the mirror. The size of the image will increase as the flashlight gets closer to the mirror.
In a plane mirror, your image is located directly behind the mirror at the same distance as you are from the mirror. The image appears to be the same size and orientation as the object but reversed left to right.
When you look at a letter in a mirror, it appears backwards because the mirror reflects the image in reverse. This reversal happens because light bounces off the mirror and preserves the original orientation of the object, but the angle at which you view the reflection causes it to appear flipped.
Exhaledair contains water vapor. It gets condensed on the mirror making your image look hazy.
Basically your image becomes magnified. I'm not sure about this, but I think the image produced is a "virtual image"
your image reflects back
The image that you see when you look in a mirror is a reflection of the light that bounces off of you and back into your eyes. This creates the illusion that your image is located behind the mirror, when in reality it is in front of it.
When you look in the mirror, your brain processes the visual information to recognize your own reflection. This can trigger self-awareness, emotional reactions, and self-evaluation. Looking in the mirror may also play a role in how we perceive and construct our self-image and identity.
When you bring the flashlight closer to the concave mirror, the image will also move closer to the mirror. The size of the image will increase as the flashlight gets closer to the mirror.
mirage mirror it's self!
In a plane mirror, your image is located directly behind the mirror at the same distance as you are from the mirror. The image appears to be the same size and orientation as the object but reversed left to right.
The image is reflected from a reflective object, in this case [your mirror], as a Book is not a mirror, it is not reflected.
When you look at a letter in a mirror, it appears backwards because the mirror reflects the image in reverse. This reversal happens because light bounces off the mirror and preserves the original orientation of the object, but the angle at which you view the reflection causes it to appear flipped.
When you move your face away from a concave mirror, the image you see in the mirror will become smaller and eventually disappear as you move further away from the focal point of the mirror. This is because the magnification effect of the concave mirror is strongest when objects are close to the mirror's focal point.
If an image moves closer to a plane mirror, the distance between the object and the mirror stays the same while the image moves towards the mirror. As the image gets closer to the mirror, it appears to move further away from the viewer. The size of the image remains the same, but its apparent distance changes.