Title: Mirrors
1Chapter 18-1
2Plane Mirror
- a flat, smooth surface
- light is reflected by regular reflection rather
than by diffuse reflection - Light rays are reflected with equal angles of
incidence and reflection.
3Plane Mirror
- Produces a virtual image which appears to be an
equal distance behind the mirror. With a virtual
image, the light rays do not actually converge on
the point where the image appears. - The object and the image have the same size.
- They are pointing in the same direction, so the
image is an erect image. - Left and right are reversed which is to say the
front and back of the image are reversed.
4If you blink your right eye, your mirror image
left eye blinks back at you
5Concave Mirrors
- A concave mirror reflects light from its inner,
(caved in) surface. - The principal axis is the straight line
perpendicular to the surface of the mirror at its
center. - The focal point
- is the point where all rays parallel to the
principal axis meet. - It is half the distance between the mirror and
the center of curvature (C). - If you point the principal axis of a concave
mirror at the sun, all the rays (which are
parallel to each otherat infinity) will be
reflected through the focus - The distance from the focal point to the mirror
along the principal axis is the focal length, f,
of the mirror.
6Real vs Virtual Images
- Real Image
- the rays actually converge and pass through the
image - it can be seen on a piece of paper or screen
- Virtual Image
- The rays do not converge at the location of the
virtual image - The virtual image cannot be projected on a screen
7How to draw Ray Diagrams
- Draw the mirror, principal axis, a vertical line
where the principal axis touches the mirror, the
image, the focal point (F) and the center of
curvature (C).
Ray 1 (the parallel ray) is from the object to
the mirror parallel to the principal axis. The
reflected ray goes through the focal point Ray 2
(the focus ray) is from the object through the
focal point. The reflected ray is parallel to
the principal axis Where Ray 1 and Ray 2
intersect is the location of the image.
8Possible scenarios for Concave Mirrors
Object Image
9Lens/mirror equation If I do I die.
- f focal length
- do distance of object from mirror
- di distance of image from mirror
10Magnification
- the ratio of the size of the image, hi ,
- to the size of the object, ho
or
11b. How high is the image?
12Virtual Images Formed by Concave Mirrors
13Image defect in Concave Mirrors
- Spherical aberration
- Parallel Incident Light from outer edge of
spherical mirror fails to focus at a point - Fix Parabolic mirror
14Convex Mirrors
- A convex mirror is a spherical mirror that
reflects light from its outer surface. - Rays reflected from a convex mirror always
diverge. - Focal length, f, is a negative number (because F
is behind the mirror) - di is negative because the image is behind the
mirror
- Convex mirrors do not form real images.
- Images are reduced in size and so appear far away
- Fisheye lens the image is small (reduced) but
wide ranging - (enlarged) field of view upright image,
virtual, reduced - (images seem farther away)
- Good for security mirrors rearview mirrors in
cars
15Problem from Opening Page of Chap 18 in Textbook
- Four Butterflies but only one is real.
- Identify the images and the shape of lenses that
produced them
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17End 18-1