A concave mirror can form real images or virtual images depending on the object position relative to the focal point of the mirror. Real images are formed when the object is located beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is located between the mirror and the focal point.
You cannot see a rainbow in a mirror because a mirror reflects light and images, but it cannot display the complex dispersion and reflection of light that creates a rainbow in the sky. The colors of a rainbow are produced by sunlight interacting with water droplets in the atmosphere, which cannot be replicated in a mirror.
Neither, the virtual image in all mirrors are the same distance aren't they? But if you mean, does it make it larger or smaller, then I'm pretty sure that it makes it larger :) or "magnified" is the technical term =P
no they are mirror images
The image formed is real, inverted, diminished and on the same side of the mirror as the object is.
A reflection in the mirror is called a mirror image. Mirror images are the virtual images that we see when looking at our reflection in a mirror.
Images are a result of reflected light. That is why you can't see yourself in the dark.
Some images on a mirror usually appear erect because of the concave mirror.
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 light rays actually converge at a point in front of the mirror, while virtual images are formed when light rays appear to diverge from a point behind the mirror. Real images are inverted, while virtual images are upright.
A concave mirror can form real images or virtual images depending on the object position relative to the focal point of the mirror. Real images are formed when the object is located beyond the focal point, while virtual images are formed when the object is located between the mirror and the focal point.
Yes, D and L isomers are enantiomers and are indeed mirror images of each other. They are non-superimposable mirror images, like our left and right hands.
Images in a convex mirror appear smaller, virtual, and upright. The reflected image is located behind the mirror and its size depends on the object's distance from the mirror.
To determine the number of images formed by a mirror, you need to consider the distance of the object from the mirror and the type of mirror (concave or convex). For a plane mirror, only one image is formed which is virtual and upright. For concave and convex mirrors, the number of images formed can vary depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point, center of curvature, and the mirror's surface.
An answer to this riddle is "A camera." Cameras reflect images like a mirror, but the camera itself is not visible in its own images.
They are 'mirror images'
Mirrors rely on light to reflect images. In a dark room, there isn't enough light for the mirror to reflect your image back to you.