| Alfred Payson Gage - 1898 - 420 páginas
...such an image is called a virtual or an imaginary image. It will be seen, by construction, that an image in a plane mirror appears as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and is of the same size and shape as the object. a polished interior surface. The distance in a straight... | |
| Walton Martin, William Hayden Rockwell - 1900 - 432 páginas
...through the back of the page, or like the surface of the type from which it was printed. The image seems as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and is of the same size. Virtual and real images : The image in the preceding illustration is only... | |
| 1900 - 410 páginas
...divide the angle formed at D into two equal parts. The images formed by a plane mirror appear Just as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. The image le a perfect representation of the object in form and size and color, but is laterally transposed,... | |
| George Arthur Hoadley - 1900 - 476 páginas
...that the image of a point in a plane mirror in on a perpendicular from the point to the mirror and as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. 455. To Construct the Image of an Object.—If the object is a straight rod like the arrow AB in Fig.... | |
| Charles Hanford Henderson, John Francis Woodhull - 1900 - 416 páginas
...therefore represent the object turned end for end or inverted, and the image appears to be located about as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of the mirror. It does not appear curved in this case. For a discussion on this point see section 290.... | |
| Alfred Payson Gage - 1902 - 394 páginas
...such an image is called a virtual or an imaginary image. It will be seen, by construction, that an image in a plane mirror appears as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and is of the same size and shape as the object. EXERCISES 1. If a mirror were perfect, could it be... | |
| Flavel Benjamin Tiffany - 1902 - 714 páginas
...backwards the lines of the pencils BC and EC until they meet. In the case of a plane mirror the image is as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and is of - B- the same size and shape as the object. But the image is reversed, as can be demonstrated... | |
| Kenneth Campbell - 1903 - 232 páginas
...of reflection that the image formed by the ordinary looking-glass, to take an example, appears to be as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it, and is like the object in all respects except that the right and left parts are interchanged. This... | |
| Frederick A. Bates - 1903 - 224 páginas
...plane mirror is a reproduction in size and shape of the object reflected, and is the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. This fact is frequently utilized to reflect a test chart placed at the back of a person in the operating... | |
| Charles Riborg Mann, George Ransom Twiss - 1905 - 488 páginas
...equal to the angle of reflection, and lies in the same plane. 14. The image of an object reflected in a plane mirror appears as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. 15. Light is diffusely reflected from unpolished surfaces. 16. A surface reflecting diffusely appears... | |
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