Introduction

Mirrors are reflective surfaces that redirect light to form images. Fundamental in optics, mirrors utilize reflection principles to manipulate light paths for visualization, measurement, and technological applications. Their study encompasses wave behavior, geometric optics, and image analysis.

"Reflection is the fundamental mechanism by which mirrors produce images, embodying the principles of wave optics and geometric symmetry." -- Isaac Newton

Types of Mirrors

Plane Mirrors

Flat reflective surfaces. Image: virtual, upright, laterally inverted, same size as object. Applications: everyday use, periscopes, optical instruments.

Concave Mirrors

Inwardly curved (converging). Focuses parallel rays to focal point. Image: real or virtual depending on object distance. Used in telescopes, headlights.

Convex Mirrors

Outwardly curved (diverging). Spreads rays, forms virtual diminished images. Used for rear-view, security mirrors.

Spherical vs Parabolic Mirrors

Spherical: easy manufacture, spherical aberration present. Parabolic: eliminates spherical aberration, focuses parallel rays precisely.

Law of Reflection

Fundamental Principle

Angle of incidence equals angle of reflection (θi = θr). Both angles measured from normal to surface.

Microscopic Mechanism

Light wavefronts encounter smooth surface, re-radiate maintaining phase, direction changes according to surface normal.

Specular vs Diffuse Reflection

Specular: smooth surfaces, mirror-like reflection. Diffuse: rough surfaces, scattered reflection.

Image Formation

Real vs Virtual Images

Real: formed by converging rays, can be projected. Virtual: formed by apparent divergence, cannot be projected.

Characteristics

Attributes: size, orientation, type (real/virtual), lateral inversion. Determined by mirror type and object distance.

Sign Conventions

Distances measured from mirror vertex. Real in front (+), virtual behind (-). Heights positive (upright), negative (inverted).

Plane Mirrors

Image Properties

Image distance equals object distance behind mirror. Image is virtual, laterally inverted, upright, same size.

Reflection Mechanism

Incident rays reflect symmetrically. Virtual focus located behind mirror plane.

Applications

Household mirrors, periscopes, kaleidoscopes, optical alignment tools.

Concave Mirrors

Geometry and Focal Length

Radius of curvature R, focal length f = R/2. Converges incident parallel rays to focal point.

Image Formation Based on Object Position

Object beyond center of curvature: real, inverted, reduced. Object at center: real, inverted, same size. Object between focus and mirror: virtual, upright, magnified.

Applications

Telescopes, shaving mirrors, headlights, solar furnaces.

Convex Mirrors

Geometry and Focal Length

Radius of curvature R negative, focal length f = -R/2. Diverges incident rays.

Image Characteristics

Always virtual, upright, diminished, located behind mirror.

Applications

Vehicle side mirrors, security mirrors, hallway surveillance.

Mirror Equation and Magnification

Mirror Equation

1/f = 1/do + 1/di

Where f = focal length, do = object distance, di = image distance.

Magnification Formula

m = hi/ho = -di/do

m = magnification, hi = image height, ho = object height. Negative m indicates inverted image.

Sign Conventions

Real images: di positive; virtual images: di negative; upright images: m positive; inverted images: m negative.

Ray Diagrams

Principal Rays for Concave Mirrors

Ray 1: parallel to principal axis, reflects through focus. Ray 2: through focal point, reflects parallel. Ray 3: through center of curvature, reflects back on itself.

Principal Rays for Convex Mirrors

Ray 1: parallel to axis, reflects as if from focal point behind mirror. Ray 2: directed toward focal point, reflects parallel. Ray 3: toward center of curvature, reflects back.

Using Ray Diagrams

Locate image position and size graphically. Confirm real or virtual nature. Essential for visualizing image characteristics.

Applications of Mirrors

Optical Instruments

Telescopes, microscopes, periscopes utilize concave and plane mirrors for image formation and path manipulation.

Safety and Surveillance

Convex mirrors for wide-angle viewing, blind spots in vehicles, stores, hallways.

Scientific and Industrial Uses

Laser systems, solar concentrators, imaging systems exploit mirror properties for precision and efficiency.

Limitations and Aberrations

Spherical Aberration

Deviation of rays from ideal focus due to spherical shape. Causes blurred images.

Coma and Astigmatism

Off-axis image distortion producing comet-like blur and asymmetric focus.

Chromatic Aberration

Occurs in lenses, minimal in mirrors. Caused by wavelength-dependent refraction, not reflection.

Experimental Methods

Measuring Focal Length

Using distant object method: focus parallel rays onto screen, measure image distance. Using mirror formula with object and image distances.

Ray Tracing Practice

Constructing ray diagrams with protractor and ruler to determine image parameters.

Advanced Optical Setups

Interferometry, laser alignment using mirrors for precise optical path control.

Mirror TypeCurvatureFocal Length (f)Typical ImageCommon Uses
Plane MirrorFlat (∞ radius)∞ (none)Virtual, upright, same sizeHousehold mirrors, periscopes
Concave MirrorConverging (R > 0)f = R/2Real or virtual, inverted or uprightTelescopes, headlights, shaving mirrors
Convex MirrorDiverging (R < 0)f = R/2 (negative)Virtual, upright, diminishedVehicle mirrors, security
RayIncident PathReflected Path
Ray 1Parallel to principal axisThrough (concave) or as if from (convex) focal point
Ray 2Through focal point (concave) or toward focal point (convex)Parallel to principal axis
Ray 3Through/aimed at center of curvatureReflects back along same path

References

  • Hecht, E., "Optics," 4th ed., Addison-Wesley, 2002, pp. 115-175.
  • Pedrotti, F. L., Pedrotti, L. M., and Pedrotti, L. S., "Introduction to Optics," 3rd ed., Pearson, 2007, pp. 200-250.
  • Smith, W. J., "Modern Optical Engineering," 4th ed., McGraw-Hill, 2007, pp. 310-360.
  • Born, M. and Wolf, E., "Principles of Optics," 7th ed., Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 40-90.
  • Saleh, B. E. A. and Teich, M. C., "Fundamentals of Photonics," 2nd ed., Wiley-Interscience, 2007, pp. 120-150.