01 Confusing Mirrors (mirrors at 90 degrees)#
Aim#
To show just plane mirrors in which the images are rather complicated.
Subjects#
6A10 (Reflection From Flat Surfaces)
Diagram#
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Fig. 568 .#
Equipment#
Planar mirror.
Two hinged planar mirrors.
Revolving double mirror; the mirrors stand perpendicular to each other.
Three planar mirrors arranged as a corner cube. .
Presentation#
Look into the planar mirror.
As is known very well,the image of the left hand is a right hand. But why are top and down not interchanged?.
Look into the hinged double mirror (see Figure 569), the angle between the two mirrors ( \(\alpha\) is larger than \(90^{\circ}\). Moving your eyes you see left and right an image of your head (Figure 569A). Left/right is interchanged in the images.
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Fig. 569 .#
Now make the \(\alpha\) smaller than \(90^{\circ}\). At around \(\alpha=60^{\circ}\) you see four images (see Figure 569B): The image in the left mirror is again imaged in the right mirror and viceversa.
Slowly the \(\alpha\) is made smaller and the two imaged images fall together (at \(\alpha=90^{\circ}\) ) (see Figure 569C). Move your head on one side to observe this particular image and see that in this image left is still left.
Look at the revolving double mirror (see Figure 570A). Turn it round slowly and observe that you are upside down (your image is rotated \(180^{\circ}\) when the mirror.
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Fig. 570 .#
Look (close one eye) into the arrangement of three planar mirrors (see Figure 571).
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Fig. 571 .#
Observe:
left remains left and up becomes down;
your eye remains caught in the middle of the arrangement; it won’t help moving your head up-down/right-left.
Explanation#
For explanation see the demonstration Corner cube.
Sources#
Hecht, Eugene, Optics, pag. 178-180 and 195
Stewart, J, Calculus, pag. 791 and 796