Real images can be both upright and inverted depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens or mirror. When the object is outside the focal point, the image is inverted. When the object is inside the focal point, the image is upright.
True. Real images formed by concave mirrors can be either upright or inverted, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point.
Real images can be upright or inverted depending on the location of the object with respect to the focal point of a converging lens or concave mirror. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image will be inverted; if the object is between the focal point and the lens/mirror, the image will be upright.
Real images produced by concave mirrors are inverted, while those produced by convex mirrors are typically upright. This occurs because light rays converge to form the real image in concave mirrors, resulting in an inversion of the image.
No, an image formed by a convex mirror is always virtual and upright. Concave mirrors can form both real and inverted images.
Real images can be both upright and inverted depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens or mirror. When the object is outside the focal point, the image is inverted. When the object is inside the focal point, the image is upright.
True. Real images formed by concave mirrors can be either upright or inverted, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror's focal point.
Real images can be upright or inverted depending on the location of the object with respect to the focal point of a converging lens or concave mirror. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image will be inverted; if the object is between the focal point and the lens/mirror, the image will be upright.
Inverted or upright.
Real images produced by concave mirrors are inverted, while those produced by convex mirrors are typically upright. This occurs because light rays converge to form the real image in concave mirrors, resulting in an inversion of the image.
No, an image formed by a convex mirror is always virtual and upright. Concave mirrors can form both real and inverted images.
Convex lenses can produce both inverted and upright images. Whether an image is inverted or upright depends on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. If the object is placed beyond the focal point, the image will be inverted; if it is placed between the focal point and the lens, the image will be upright.
In converging mirrors (such as concave mirrors), the images formed can be real or virtual, depending on the object distance. The image is typically magnified and can be either upright or inverted. In diverging mirrors (such as convex mirrors), the image is always virtual, upright, and reduced in size.
A converging lens produces a real or virtual image, depending on the location of the object with respect to the focal point. Real images are inverted and can be projected onto a screen, while virtual images are upright and cannot be projected.
No, virtual images can be either erect or inverted depending on the type of mirror or lens and the object's position relative to the focal point. Real images are always inverted due to the way light rays converge at the image point.
The image formed by a lens can be either upright or inverted, depending on the position of the object relative to the focal point of the lens. If the object is beyond the focal point, the image will be real, inverted, and reduced. If the object is within the focal point, the image will be virtual, upright, and magnified.
Convex lenses form real images and concave lenses form virtual images. But there is one case in which convex lens also forms virtual images. This is when object is placed between Principal Focus "F" and Optical Centre "O"