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English - Chinese The Optics Book - G.O. and Thin lenses Written by:Karen
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Related Articles:

converging lens Applet
diverging lens Applet
Diverging Mirror Applet
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In this section:

The Optics Book

1. Before Optics
2. Light and Illumination
3. Reflection and refraction
4. Geometrical Optics and thin lenses

lenses.htm">Thin lenses
Ray Diagrams
lenses.htm"> Equations
Mirrors
lenses.htm">Practical Aplications
5. The human eye
6. Optics instruments
7. Scattering & spectrum
8. Color
9. Interferences & difraction
10. Polarization
11. Quantic Optics

Plane Mirrors

            Plane mirrors are the mirrors which we use to view ourselves in.  When we look into a plane mirror, we see our reflection, which isn’t distorted in size.  But the image formed is left right reversed.  That is why if you have a birthmark on your right cheek, it will appear to be on your left cheek in a mirror.  Because the image is erect it must be virtual. 

Mirrors

            Curved mirrors work in the same way that lenses work.  The difference is that a concave mirror, works the way a convex lens does, and a convex mirror works the way a concave lens does.  This means that a concave mirror is a converging mirror, so the rays will focus on the same side of the mirror.  On the other hand, a convex mirror will diverge and have a virtual focus located at a point F on the other side of the mirror.  The center of curvature of a mirror is located at 2F. 

One of the problems that a spherical mirror has is that Light rays won’t focus directly onto F.  Therefore the image is a little fuzzy.  To correct this, mirrors are shaped parabolically, which forces the Light rays to focus onto F.

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