mirror - physics by: rey san andrew rimando
DESCRIPTION
In this PowerPoint Presentation, you will find related topics with explanation like the Three Types of Mirror; it's characteristics and functions. Attached also is the video presentation used under the hyperlink(UNDERLINED WORDS). I'm hoping this will help a lot of students. Thanks! -ReyTRANSCRIPT
MIRROR
A POWERPOINT PRESENTATION BY:
REY SAN ANDREW RIMANDO
MIRROR
SEPTEMBER 24,2012PHYSICS LABORATORY
ENGINEERING PHYSICSII
A mirror is an object with at least one polished and therefore reflective surface. The most familiar type of mirror is the plane mirror, which has a
flat surface.
Curved mirrors are also used, to produce magnified or diminished images or focus light or simply distort the reflected image.
Three Types of Mirrors
1. Plain Mirror - is a mirror with a planar reflective surface
Note: A flat mirror reflects light rays in the same order as they approach the mirror
How Plain Mirror works?
For the Plain Mirror, the light reflected according to the
Law of ReflectionWhen a light ray is incident upon a reflecting
surface, the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. Both of these angles are measured relative to a normal drawn to the surface. The incident ray, the reflected ray, and the normal all lie in the same plane.
P.S. Reflection – bouncing back from a surface
Two Kinds of Reflection
Diffuse reflection
When rays are reflected from a rough surface, they are reflected in many directions and no clear image is formed. None of the normal drawn to the surface (at the point at which the incident light ray strikes the surface) are parallel.
Regular reflection
When rays are reflected from a smooth surface, they are reflected so that a clear image is formed. The reflected rays are nearly parallel. The normal drawn to the surface (at the point at which the incident ray strikes the surface) are nearly parallel.
When the eyes receive these light waves, it looks as if the waves are diverging from behind the mirror, making it appear as if the object is behind the mirror as well. This type of image is called a VIRTUAL IMAGE, because light waves do not actually pass through that point, it only appears so. The distance between the object and the mirror is called the object distance and the distance between the virtual image and the mirror is the image distance. Notice that on plane mirrors, the object distance is equal to the image distance.
Here’s how the REAL OBJECT and the VIRTUAL IMAGE works..
The Formation of the Real Object & Virtual Image
Characteristics of a Plain Mirror
Object size = image size Object distance = image distance Orientation = erect Always forms a virtual image Image is reversed, left to right
Angle of incidence = Angle of Reflection For each ray
Dotted lines Shows the Apparent
Ray source
Three Types of Mirror
2. CONCAVE MIRROR
Concave mirrors reflect light inward to one focal point, therefore they are used to focus light. Unlike convex mirrors, concave mirrors show different types of image depending on the distance between the object and the mirror itself.
These mirrors are called "converging" because they tend to collect light that falls on them, refocusing parallel incoming rays toward a focus. This is because the light is reflected at different angles, since the normal to the surface differs with each spot on the mirror.
Characteristics of Concave Mirror
The focal length is positive (because the object and the focus are on the same side of the mirror)
The object and the focus are on the same side of the mirror (inside the arc)
Real images can be formed by the mirror when the object is outside of the focus; an inverted image is formed
Virtual images are formed by the mirror when the object is within the focus; an erect image is formed
No image is formed when the object is at the focus When the object is at the center of curvature, an
inverted image is formed at the center of curvature
Parallel rays
Reflected rays
RealFocus
Focal length = +Forms real, inverted,Reduced or enlarged
Image. Also formsVirtual, erect,
Enlarged images.
Parallel ray
Focal rayRay thru 2f f2 f
Image is:RealInvertedReducedAppears between f & 2f
Object beyond 2f
Image is:RealInvertedSame sizeAppears at 2f
Parallel ray
Focal rayray thru 2f
f2 f
Object at 2f
Three Types of Mirror
3. Convex Mirror
-is a curved mirror in which the reflective surface bulges toward the light source. Convex mirrors reflect light outwards, therefore they are not used to focus light.
The image is always virtual (rays haven't actually passed though the image), diminished (smaller), and upright . These features make convex mirrors very useful: everything appears smaller in the mirror, so they cover a wider field of view than a normal plane mirror does as the image is "compressed".
Characteristics of Convex Mirror
The focal length is negative (because the object and the focus are on opposite sides of the mirror)
The object and the focus are on opposite sides of the mirror (the focus is on the inside of the mirror and the object is on the outside)
Only virtual images are formed; all images are smaller than the object
Parallel rays
Reflected rays
Virtual focus
Focal length = -Forms only virtual,
erect, reduced images betweenthe virtual focus and the mirror.
Dotted lines Shows the ApparentRay focus
Apparent Convergence of rays
2 f(f)
Focal ray
Parallel ray
Ray thru 2f
Image is:VirtualErectReducedAppears behind the mirror
…the END!...