A spherical mirror is like a shiny ball that can make things look bigger or smaller depending on where you stand.
Imagine you're playing with a mirror ball, one of those round balls covered in tiny mirrors. If you’re close to it, you’ll see lots of reflections, and they all seem to be coming from the center of the ball. That’s because each little mirror is part of a big curved surface, just like how a real spherical mirror works.
Like Looking in a Bowl
Now think about a bowl, one of those deep soup bowls you might eat cereal out of. If you put a spoon inside it and look at your face, the bowl acts like a spherical mirror. When you’re close to the bowl, your reflection looks bigger, kind of like when you look in a magnifying glass.
But if you move farther away from the bowl, your reflection becomes smaller, just like when you step back from a big round mirror and see yourself as tiny as a sticker on a wall.
So, a spherical mirror works by bending light in a special way, just like how a ball or a bowl can change how things look to you.
Examples
- Imagine standing inside a giant ball made of mirrors, you see yourself in all directions.
- You look into a shiny globe, and your face appears on every side.
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See also
- How Does Spherical Mirrors Work?
- How Does REFLECTION OF LIGHT Work?
- What are convex mirrors?
- Why Do Things Look Darker When They're Wet?
- What is Light that bounced off your face?