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 plane mirror is not a spherical mirror. A plane mirror has a flat reflective surface, while a spherical mirror has a curved reflective surface. The shape of the mirror affects the way light is reflected, with spherical mirrors causing light rays to converge or diverge depending on their curvature.
If you replace the glass plate with a plane mirror in the Newton's rings experiment, interference fringes will not be observed. The formation of Newton's rings depends on the light reflecting off the two surfaces of the air film between the glass plate and the lens, creating interference patterns. However, the mirror does not create the necessary conditions for interference to occur.
A plane mirror.
If a plane mirror is used in place of a glass sheet in the Newton's rings experiment, interference patterns will not be observed. The glass sheet is crucial in creating a thin air film that causes interference patterns to form. Without the glass sheet, there will not be a variation in the path length of light, leading to the absence of Newton's rings.
It is a mirror or a looking glass
A mirror is a 'reflector'. If made of of silvered glass as a common mirror, the glass surface also represents a refractive plane.
plane mirror is never a spherical mirror,spherical mirrors are made up by cutting the part of the sherical balls and then polishing them.while the plane mirror is just a sheet of polished glass
it is a plane mirror
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.
every plane mirror has a lining of silver on its back...which makes reflection possible
every plane mirror has a lining of silver on its back...which makes reflection possible
If I remember correctly, the angle that the light makes with the plane of the surface is called the incident angle.Incident angle.
it is zero . Power = 1/focal length The focal length of a plane glass or mirror is infinite, therfore power is zero
No, a plane mirror is not a spherical mirror. A plane mirror has a flat reflective surface, while a spherical mirror has a curved reflective surface. The shape of the mirror affects the way light is reflected, with spherical mirrors causing light rays to converge or diverge depending on their curvature.
A plane mirror is a mirror with a planar reflective surface. For light rays striking a plane mirror, the angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence. Thus a collimated beam of light does not spread out after reflection from a plane mirror, except for diffraction effects.Insertformulahere==Images== A plane mirror makes images of objects in front of it; these images appear to be behind the plane in which the mirror lies. A straight line drawn from part of an object to the corresponding part of its image makes a right angle with, and is bisected by, the surface of the plane mirror. The image formed by Insertformulahere==Images==a plane mirror is always virtual (meaning that the light rays do not actually come from the image), upright, and of the same shape and size as the object it is reflecting. A virtual image is a copy of an object formed at the location from which the light rays appear to come. However, the image is a laterally-inverted "mirror image" of the object. If a person is reflected in a plane mirror, the image of his right hand appears to be the left hand of the image.