Science, asked by karamjitkour1979, 11 hours ago

if aperature of concave mirror​

Answers

Answered by arshasanthosh8
0

Explanation:

For a spherical mirror, the diameter of the aperture cannot be more than twice the radius of curvature. Such a mirror would have a significant spherical aberration. A large aperture mirror that can focus parallel incident light into a point would need to have a parabolic shape, such a lens would have no (theoretical) limit on its size. Spherical mirrors do not focus parallel light rays to a single focal point. The point of using an aperture much smaller that the radius of the mirror is to restrict the incoming light to a region where rays do come to a single focal point

Answered by s04328fannielois
0

Answer:

Aperture: The diameter of the spherical mirror is called its aperture. The reflecting surface of the mirror. Focus: The point of the principal axis at which the rays parallel to principal axis meet (concave mirror) or appear to meet (convex mirror) after reflection.

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