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Curved Mirrors

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Curved Mirrors. Chapter 14 Section 3. Spherical Mirrors. A Spherical mirror has the shape of a sphere’s surface. It has some kind of curve The mirror is not flat. Examples: Passenger side rear view mirror Some dressing table mirrors - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Curved Mirrors Chapter 14 Section 3
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Page 1: Curved Mirrors

Curved Mirrors

Chapter 14 Section 3

Page 2: Curved Mirrors

Spherical Mirrors A Spherical mirror has the shape of a

sphere’s surface. It has some kind of curve The mirror is not flat.

Examples: Passenger side rear view mirror Some dressing table mirrors

Used to magnify or shrink the size of a reflected image of an object.

Page 3: Curved Mirrors

Concave Spherical Mirrors Concave Spherical Mirror – An

inwardly curved mirrored surface that is a portion of sphere and that converges incoming light rays. Concave spherical mirrors are used

whenever a magnified image of an object is needed.

Page 4: Curved Mirrors

Curvature of the mirror One factor that determines where

the image will appear and how large that image will be is the amount by which the mirror is curved.

This depends on the radius of curvature

Page 5: Curved Mirrors

Radius of Curvature The radius of curvature is the same

as the radius of the sphere whose curvature would be identical to that of the mirror.

Radius of curvature variable – Uppercase (R) The radius is the distance from the

mirror’s surface to the center of curvature (C)

Page 6: Curved Mirrors

Principal Axis The Principal axis is the line that

extends infinitely from the center of the mirrors surface through the center of curvature.

Page 7: Curved Mirrors

Concave Mirror Diagram

Page 8: Curved Mirrors

Image Point The image point in the previous

picture forms below the principal axis and forms the image in front of the mirror.

If a piece of paper was placed at the image point, a clear image would form on the paper of the pencil. Move the paper back and forth and the

image will become blurry and out of focus.

Page 9: Curved Mirrors

Real Image Real Image – An image formed when

rays of light actually intersect at a single point.

Real images can be displayed on a surface Example:

Movie screen

Page 10: Curved Mirrors

Image Location Can Be Predicted

The object’s distance, image distance and radius of curvature are all interdependent.

Change one of the three can affect one of the others.

Page 11: Curved Mirrors

Mirror Equation

p – Object Distance

q – Image Distance

R – Radius of Curvature

Rqp211

Page 12: Curved Mirrors

Focal Point Focal Point - Point where rays from

lens or curved mirrors converge. Denoted by capital letter (F)

At this point on a curved mirror the light rays converge to a single point. The reflected rays of light from a source

emitted at the focal point will emerge parallel to each other.

Page 13: Curved Mirrors

Focal Point Diagram

Page 14: Curved Mirrors

Focal Length Focal Length – The distance from the

curved mirror or lens to the focal points. Denoted as lower case (f)

The focal length is half the distance of the radius of curvature. Or the radius of curvature is double that

of the focal length.

Page 15: Curved Mirrors

Mirror Equation

p – Object Distance

q – Image Distance

f – focal Length fqp111

Page 16: Curved Mirrors

Front and Back of a Concave Mirror

In order to use the mirror equation, a set of sign conventions for the three variables must be established. The region where light rays reflect and real

images form is called the front side of the mirror.

The region where light rays do not exist and imaginary images are formed is called the back side of the mirror.

Mirror images are usually drawn so the front side is to the left of the mirror’s surface.

Page 17: Curved Mirrors

Positive and Negative Concave Mirror

Object and image distances can be positive and negative. The distance has a positive sign when

measured from the center of the mirror to any point in front side of the mirror.

Distances for images that form on the back side of the mirror will always be a negative distance.

Since the focal point is in front on the mirror, the focal length will always be positive.

Page 18: Curved Mirrors

Positive and Negative Heights

The object and image heights are positive when they are above the principal axis.

The object and image heights are negative when they are below the principal axis.

Page 19: Curved Mirrors

Magnification Unlike flat mirrors, curved mirrors

form images that are not the same size as the object.

To measure how much larger or smaller the image is compared to the object's size is called the magnification of the image.

Page 20: Curved Mirrors

Magnification is defined as the ratio of the height of the pencil’s image to the pencil’s actual height. Magnification is denoted by an

uppercase letter (M) It is also defined as the negative of

the ratio of the image distance over the object distance.

If the image is smaller then the object, M should be less than 1.

If the image is greater then the object, M should be greater than 1. Magnification is a unitless quantity.

Page 21: Curved Mirrors

Magnification Equation

M – Magnification h’ – Image height h – Object height q – image distance p – object height

pq

hhM '

Page 22: Curved Mirrors

Magnification Clarification For an image in front of the mirror, M

is negative and is inverted. For an image in the back of the

mirror, M is positive and the image is upright.

Page 23: Curved Mirrors

Sign Convention for Magnification

Orientation of image with respect to

object

Sign of M Types of image this applies to

Upright + Virtual

Inverted - Real

Page 24: Curved Mirrors

Ray Diagrams Ray diagrams can be used for

concave spherical mirrors. The rules for making a ray diagram

of a flat mirror are the same for making ray diagrams of concave spherical mirrors. Measure all distances along the principal

axis and mark the center of curvature (C) and focal point (F).

Must be drawn to scale.

Page 25: Curved Mirrors

Ray Diagram for a Spherical Mirror

For a spherical mirror, three reference rays are used to find the image point. The intersection of any two rays locates

the image. The third ray should intersect the same

point and is used to check the diagram.

Page 26: Curved Mirrors

Rules For Drawing Reference Rays

Ray Line drawn from object to mirror

Line drawn from mirror to image after reflection

1 Parallel to principal axis

Through focal point (F)

2 Through focal point (F)

Parallel to principal axis

3 Through center of curvature (C)

Back along itself through (C)

Page 27: Curved Mirrors

Object Distance Greater Than Focal Length

Page 28: Curved Mirrors

Object Distance Equal to Focal Length

Page 29: Curved Mirrors

Object Distance Less Than Focal Length

Page 30: Curved Mirrors

Example Problem When an object is placed 30.0cm in

front of a concave mirror, a real image is formed 60.0cm from the mirror’s surface. Find the focal length.

Page 31: Curved Mirrors

Example Problem Answer f = 20.0 cm

Page 32: Curved Mirrors

Convex Spherical Mirror Convex Spherical Mirror – An

outwardly curved, mirrored surface that is a portion of a sphere and that diverges incoming light rays.

Examples: Mirrors to dangerous driveway

entrances. Passenger Side rearview Mirror

“Objects in the mirror are closer than they appear”

Page 33: Curved Mirrors

Diverging Mirror A convex spherical mirror is

sometimes called a “Diverging Mirror” The incoming rays of light diverge after

reflecting off the surface as though they were coming from some point behind the mirror.

Page 34: Curved Mirrors

Virtual Image The image that is produced on a

convex spherical mirror (diverging mirror) will always be a virtual image. Imaginary image.

Page 35: Curved Mirrors

Convex Spherical Mirror Terminology

The image distance (q) will always be negative.

The focal length (f) will always be negative cause the mirrored surface is on the opposite side of the radius.

Page 36: Curved Mirrors

Ray Diagrams for a Convex Mirror

Drawing Ray Diagrams for a convex mirror are slightly different then for a concave mirror. The three rays are still needed going to

the focal point, center of curvature and one parallel to the principal axis

The focal point and center of curvature are located behind the mirror. Dotted lines are extended along the

reflected reference rays to points behind the mirror.

An upright imaginary image forms where the three rays intersect.

Page 37: Curved Mirrors

Ray Diagram of a Convex Spherical Mirror

Page 38: Curved Mirrors

Magnification for a Convex Spherical Mirror

The magnification for a convex spherical mirror will always be less than 1. The image always appears smaller than

the object. This gives the appearance that the object is

further away from the mirror. Hence the warning sticker on the bottom of

the mirror on the passenger side rearview mirror.

Page 39: Curved Mirrors

Convex Mirror Applications Convex spherical mirrors take the

objects in a large field of view and produce a small image.

They are well suited for providing a fixed observer with a complete view of a large area.

Page 40: Curved Mirrors

Different Applications of Convex Spherical Mirrors

Page 41: Curved Mirrors

Symbol Situation Signp The object is in front of

the mirror +q The image is in front of

the mirror (real image) +q The image is behind the

mirror (virtual image) -R,f The center of curvature

is in front of the mirror (Concave Spherical Mirror)

+

R,f The center of curvature is behind the mirror (Convex Spherical Mirror)

-

R,f The mirror has no curvature (Flat Mirror) ∞

h’ The image is above the principal axis +

h’ The image is below the principal axis -

Page 42: Curved Mirrors

Example Problem The radius of curvature of a convex

mirror is 12.0cm. Where is the focal point?

Page 43: Curved Mirrors

Example Problem Answer 6.00 cm behind the mirror, therefore

the value needs to be negative.

f = -6.00cm


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