Charcteristics of The Image Formed by A Plane Mirror
Charcteristics of The Image Formed by A Plane Mirror
Charcteristics of The Image Formed by A Plane Mirror
The image is situated at the same distance from the mirror as the object.
Students of Physics are usually quite intrigued by this apparent left-right reversal.
Exactly what is happening to cause ILLINOIS to read as SIONILLI? And why is the
reversal observed in the left to right direction and not in the head to toe direction?
These questions urge us to ponder the situation more deeply. Let's suppose for a
moment that we could print the name of your favorite school subject on your shirt
and have you look in the mirror. We all know that when you look in the mirror, you
will see the letters SCISYHP written on the shirt of your image - the reversed form
of PHYSICS. But can we really say that the word appearing on your shirt is the word
PHYSICS (with the letters un-reversed)? The answer is no! (But you don't have to
believe it yet. Keep reading ... and pondering.)
To further explore the reason for this appearance of left-right reversal, let's
suppose we write the word PHYSICS on a transparency and hold it in front of us in
front of a plane mirror. If we look at the image of the transparency in the mirror,
we would observe the expected - SCISYHP. The letters are written reversed when
viewed in the mirror. But what if we look at the letters on the transparency? How
are those letters oriented? When we face the mirror and look at the letters on the
transparency, we observe the unexpected - SCISYHP. When viewed from the
perspective of the person holding the transparency (and facing the mirror, the
letters exhibit the same left-right reversal as the mirror image. The letters appear
reversed on the image because they are actually reversed on the shirt. At least
they are reversed when viewed from the perspective of a person who is facing the
mirror. Imagine that! All this time you thought the mirror was reversing the letters
on your shirt. But the fact is that the letters were already reversed on your shirt; at
least they were reversed from the person who stands behind the T-shirt. The
people who view your shirt from the front have a different reference frame and thus
do not see the letters as being reversed. The apparent left-right reversal of an
image is simply a frame of reference phenomenon. When viewing the image of your
shirt in a plane mirror (or any part of the world), you are viewing your shirt from
the front. This is a switch of reference frames.
Object Distance and Image Distance
A fourth and final characteristic of plane mirror images is that the dimensions of the
image are the same as the dimensions of the object. If a 1.6-meter tall person
stands in front of a mirror, he/she will see an image that is 1.6-meters tall. If a
penny with a diameter of 18-mm is placed in front of a plane mirror, the image of
the penny has a diameter of 18 mm. The ratio of the image dimensions to the
object dimensions is termed the magnification. Plane mirrors produce images that
have a magnification of 1.