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Concave Mirrors Reflection, Image Height, and Distance.

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Presentation on theme: "Concave Mirrors Reflection, Image Height, and Distance."— Presentation transcript:

1 Concave Mirrors Reflection, Image Height, and Distance

2 What is a concave mirror Imagine a large hollow sphere, with a mirror finish on the inside. Cut a square out of the sphere’s shell and look at the mirrored side. Mirror

3 Ray Diagram A Ray Diagram will tell you what a reflection will look like in the mirror without having to actually look into it…

4 Parts of Ray Diagrams Start out with a concave mirror and a line going straight to the middle. This will be called the Principal Axis Principal Axis Mirror

5 Center of Curvature Imagine if the mirror was a whole circle… The center of that circle, would be the Center of Curvature ‘C’ C

6 Focal Point Def: A specific point where all light rays parallel to the principal axis are reflected to by the concave mirror. Principal Axis Focal Point (F) F is always closer to the mirror than C. C Center of Curvature

7 Laws of Reflection There are two rules to tell us how light will reflect when it hits a curved mirror

8 Laws of Reflection for Concave Mirrors Law 1: Any incident light ray parallel to the principal axis, will reflect through the focal point. Principal Axis F

9 Laws of Reflection for Concave Mirrors Law 2: Any incident ray of light passing through the focal point will reflect parallel to the principal axis. Principal AxisF

10 Drawing a Ray Diagram- Step 1 CF Situation 1: An object is outside of the focal point and the center of curvature. Draw the mirror, the principal axis, the focal point and the object.

11 Drawing a Ray Diagram- Step 1 CF Situation 1: An object is outside of the focal point and the center of curvature. Before we begin drawing the diagram we must consider the two Laws of Reflection for Concave Mirrors

12 Drawing Ray Diagrams- Step 2 Apply one Law: From the TOP of the object- Incoming ray is parallel to the principal axis and is reflected through the focal point… CF

13 Drawing Ray Diagrams- Step 3 Apply the other Law: From the TOP of the object- Incoming ray goes through the focal point and is reflected back parallel to the principal axis… CF

14 Drawing Ray Diagrams- Step 4 Where the red lines (reflected beams of light) cross will be where the top of the pencil appears to be in the reflection you see in the mirror… CF

15 Drawing Ray Diagrams- Step 4 So draw in the pencil. Note: The bottom of the pencil will ALWAYS be resting on the principal axis! CF Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection

16 Situation 1 When the object is outside C and F, the reflected image is smaller and inverted than the actual object. CF This reflected image is called a real image, because it is formed after the light reflects off the mirror.

17 Situation 2 Now, consider the situation where the object is located at C. C F Sketch a ray diagram to determine where the image would be located and how it’s size would change.

18 Situation 2 C F The image is still inverted, but is the same size as the actual object, and located directly underneath it.

19 Situation 3 What if the object is located between C and F? C F Sketch a ray diagram to determine where the image would be located and how it’s size would change.

20 Situation 3 C F Image is inverted, magnified larger than the actual object, and appears farther away than the original.

21 Situation 4 The object is located on the focal point. C F The reflected rays never overlap, so no image is formed. An object sitting at the focal point of the mirror “disappears” in the mirror.

22 How to use Ray Diagrams If you have enough information to draw an accurate Ray Diagram you can determine the size of the reflection without doing any math! But the Diagram has to be TO SCALE!

23 Practice Complete the problems provided by the teacher. To make life simple, use the focal point given and your compass to draw the mirror on your diagram.

24 Ray Diagram or Not? An image of Mt. Everest shows up in a mirror of focal length 25 cm, and the mountain appears to be 30 cm tall. What is the height of the real thing?

25 Ray Diagram or Not? Here a scale drawing isn’t realistic, so we have to use mathematics. But a diagram is still useful to see what variables we will use!

26 The Mirror Equation Consider a basic ray diagram: F Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection

27 The Mirror Equation Consider a basic ray diagram: The focal point is “f” F Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection

28 The Mirror Equation Consider a basic ray diagram: The object distance is “p”: f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p

29 The Mirror Equation Consider a basic ray diagram: The image distance is “q”: f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p q

30 The Mirror Equation Consider a basic ray diagram: Focal length:f Object distance: p Image distance: q f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p q

31 The Mirror Equation Putting these three together gives the relationship we call the Mirror Equation: Focal length:f Object distance: p Image distance: q

32 Magnification Mirrors also change the size of objects. How much it changes the size is called the Magnification of the mirror.

33 Magnification Magnification is a ratio of the object and the image’s: a) height or b) distance Either one will give you the magnification.

34 Magnification Let’s look at the ray diagram again: ‘p’ and ‘q’ are still the same. f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p q

35 Magnification Let’s look at the ray diagram again: ‘h’ is the object’s height: f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p q h

36 Magnification Let’s look at the ray diagram again: ‘h' ’ is the object’s height: f Real Pencil Pencil’s Reflection p q h h'

37 Magnification The equation for magnification relates all these variables by:

38 Practice Using these two equations together can be used to find out anything you want to know about an object’s reflection: 1)2)


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