It goes to "the point at infinity"
6m
A parallel light source will reflect off a concave mirror and go through a point inside the curve called the focus. Reflecting from a convex mirror will cause all light to bounce off in a straight line away from a focus point behind the mirror.
It does not have a specific name.
The answer is 15 millimeters behind the mirror, and the distance from the actual object to the image is 30 millimeters. Plane mirrors have a flat focus that places the image as far behind the mirror as you are in front of it.
someone threw a dart into a ford focus and some dude thought this is a pretty cool name for a town
It is reflected back parallel to the principal axis. (apex)
It is reflected back parallel to the principal axis. (apex)
It is reflected back parallel to the principal axis. (apex)
The focus is the point at which light rays converge after passing through a lens or reflecting off a mirror. For a concave mirror or converging lens, the focus is in front of the mirror/lens. For a convex mirror or diverging lens, the focus is behind the mirror/lens.
The error produced by the thickness of the mirror is known as spherical aberration. This occurs when light rays passing through the outer edges of the mirror focus at a different point compared to those passing through the center, leading to a blurry or distorted image.
In a convex mirror, the focus point is located behind the mirror, on the same side as the object. In a concave mirror, the focus point is located in front of the mirror, on the opposite side of the object.
since the convex mirror is curved outwards the the focus is behind the mirror
A concave mirror has a virtual focus. This is because the rays of light that are incident on a concave mirror are reflected and appear to diverge from a point behind the mirror, creating a virtual focus.
The light source for a microscope is typically a halogen bulb. The mirror below the diaphragm helps to direct and focus the light onto the specimen. Adjusting the mirror angle can control the amount and direction of light passing through the diaphragm to illuminate the specimen.
It is called a Cassegrain. The small convex subreflector is a hyperboloid with one focus at the focus of the main mirror, and the other focus just behind the main mirror where the eyepiece is.
The distance at which the light rays bent by the lens (or mirror) converge into a coherent image.
The convex mirror diverges light rays, so if you draw the reflected rays in front of the mirror and continue drawing them at the back of the mirror the virtual light rays (at the back of the mirror) will join. This point is called a Virtual Focus Point.