Mirror

From Free net encyclopedia

This article is about the reflective surfaces. For other senses of this word, see mirror (disambiguation).

A mirror is a surface with good specular reflection that is smooth enough to form an image. The best known example is the plane mirror. The most common use is in the home for personal grooming but mirrors are also used in scientific apparatus such as telescopes and lasers, and in industrial machinery.

Contents

Effect

Image:Waves reflecting from a curved mirror.PNG In a plane mirror, a parallel beam of light changes its direction as a whole, whilst still remaining parallel; the images formed by a plane mirror are virtual images, of the same size as the original object (see mirror image). There are also parabolic concave mirrors, where a parallel beam of light becomes a convergent beam, whose rays intersect in the focus of the mirror. Finally, there are convex mirrors, where a parallel beam becomes divergent, with the apparent intersection occurring behind the mirror. Note that spherical concave and convex mirrors do not have a single focal point, as often described in high school physics text books (see spherical aberration in lens (optics) and aberration in optical systems).

A beam of light reflects off a mirror at an angle of reflection that is equal to its angle of incidence. That is, if the beam of light is shining on a mirror's surface at a 30° angle from vertical, then it reflects from the point of incidence at a 30° angle from vertical in the opposite direction.

Image in a mirror

For an object with approximate reflection symmetry, a reflection in some mirror plane corresponds to a combination of:

  • a translation if the mirror is parallel to the symmetry plane of the object, and otherwise a rotation about the line of intersection of the two planes by an angle which is twice the angle between the two planes
  • a reflection in the approximate symmetry plane of the object (due to the assumption this is a minor change)

Image:Evstafiev-bosnia-sarajevo-shattered-mirror.jpg We can apply this to the image in a mirror of, say, a standing person, because people have approximate bilateral symmetry. The image is the most realistic if it is still vertical, i.e., if the rotation is about a vertical axis. This is the case iff the mirror is vertical. In this case the image of the person is in normal standing orientation and vertically in a normal position, at a horizontally different position and with an orientation rotated about a vertical axis, the latter except if the mirror is parallel to the approximate symmetry plane of the person.

In particular, if one looks at one's image in a vertical mirror in left-right orientation, the image corresponds to a rotation by 180° about the vertical axis in the mirror, combined with a reflection in one's approximate symmetry plane.

When the rotation is so obvious that it is not worth mentioning, the second component in this decomposition of the effect of the mirror is sometimes emphasized, by saying that a mirror "reverses left and right". The question is sometimes asked, "Why does the mirror reverse left to right and not top to bottom?" The simple answer to this question is that it does - just look in a mirror attached to the ceiling! However, it is not what is usually meant by the question. The questioner means to ask, why does a chiral object (such as a right hand or glove) appear as an object of opposite chirality (left hand or glove) in the mirror? The answer is that chirality of the three-dimensional space is dictated by the choice of the directions of the three axes. When the direction of one axis is reversed, as is the case in a mirror image, the chirality (or "handedness") of space changes to the opposite one. If two mirrors are set side by side (with, say, a 90° angle between them), the axes in the doubly reflected image are inverted twice and the "handedness" of the image is not changed. In such a double mirror, a right hand looks like a right hand.

Composition

Early mirrors were usually a sheet of polished metal, often silver or copper, for example the Aranmula kannadi.

Most modern mirrors consist of a thin layer of aluminium deposited on a sheet of glass. They are back silvered, where the reflecting surface is viewed through the glass sheet; this makes the mirror durable, but lowers the image quality of the mirror due to extraneous reflections from the front surface of the glass. This type of mirror reflects about 80% of the incident light. The "back side" of the mirror is often painted black to completely seal the metal from corrosion.

Applications

Image:Mirror.globe.arp.500pix.jpg

Viewing one's own body

A mirror is used for inspecting parts of one's body which are difficult or impossible to see directly, such as the face, neck or the whole body. This may be to check physical appearance (including clothing, make-up, hair, etc.) or to control applying make-up, shaving, cutting hair, fixing one's tie, etc.

The optimal size and position for a mirror to view one's whole body is half of your height with the top edge between the top of your head and eyes.

It is a common myth that if one happens to break a mirror they will receive seven years bad luck.

Instruments

Telescopes and other precision instruments use front silvered mirrors, where the reflecting surface is placed on the front surface of the glass, which gives better image quality. Some of them use silver, but most are aluminum, which is more reflective at short wavelengths than silver. All of these coatings are easily damaged and require special handling. They reflect 90% to 95% of the incident light when new. The coatings are typically applied by vacuum deposition. A protective overcoat is usually applied before the mirror is removed from the vacuum, because the coating otherwise begins to corrode as soon as it is exposed to oxygen and humidity in the air. Front silvered mirrors have to be resurfaced occasionally to keep their quality.

The reflectivity of the mirror coating can be measured using a reflectometer and depends on the wavelength of light as well as the metal. This is exploited in some optical work to make cold mirrors and hot mirrors. A cold mirror is made by using a transparent substrate and choosing a coating material that is more reflective to visible light and more transmissive to infrared light. A hot mirror is the opposite, the coating preferentially reflects infrared. Mirror surfaces are sometimes given thin film overcoatings both to retard degradation of the surface and to increase their reflectivity in parts of the spectrum where they will be used. For instance, aluminum mirrors are commonly coated with silicon dioxide or magnesium fluoride. The reflectivity as a function of wavelength depends on both the thickness of the coating and on how it is applied.

For scientific optical work, dielectric mirrors are often used. These are glass (or sometimes other material) substrates on which one or more layers of dielectric material are deposited, to form an optical coating. By careful choice of the type and thickness of the dielectric layers, the range of wavelengths and amount of light reflected from the mirror can be specified. The best mirrors of this type can reflect >99.999% of the light (in a narrow range of wavelengths) which is incident on the mirror. Such mirrors are often used in lasers.

In astronomy, adaptive optics is a technique to measure variable image distortions and adapt a mirror accordingly on a timescale of milliseconds, to compensate for the distortions.

Safety and easier viewing

Rear-view mirrors are applied in and on vehicles (such as cars, or bicycles), to allow drivers to see other vehicles coming up behind them.

Some motorcycle helmets have a built-in so-called MROS (Multiple Reflective Optic System): a set of reflective surfaces inside the helmet which together function as a rear-view mirror [1].

There exist rear view sunglasses, of which the left end of the left glass and the right end of the right glass work as mirrors.

Image:Spiegel.jpg Rounded (convex) mirrors are sometimes placed at road junctions, and corners of places such as parking lots or stores, allowing people to see around corners to avoid crashing into other vehicles or shopping carts.

Mirrors are also sometimes used as part of security systems, so that a single video camera can show more than one angle at a time.

High quality flat mirrors are essential for making corner reflectors, which are used for emergency location, and even laser ranging to the Moon.

A mirror is sometimes used for voyeurism, e.g. upskirt. Other uses of mirrors in hedonistic acts include the classic 'mirror on the ceiling' for use during sex (see The Eagles' Hotel California), and the use of mirrors for 'cutting' and snorting cocaine. Use of a large number of mirrors in a confined space can act to satisfy people's desire for satisfaction of their ego, as in the hall of mirrors in the Palace of Versailles.

One-way mirror

A one-way mirror, also called two-way mirror, reflects some percentage of the light and lets some other percentage pass. It is a sheet of glass coated with a layer of metal only a few dozen atoms thick, allowing some of the light through the surface (from both sides). It is used between a dark room and a brightly lit room. Persons on the brightly lit side see their own reflection - it looks like a normal mirror. Persons on the dark side see through it - it looks like a transparent window. It may be used to observe criminal suspects or customers (to watch out for theft). The same type of mirror, when used in an optical instrument, is called a half-silvered mirror or beam splitter. Its purpose is to split a beam of light so that half passes straight through, while the other half is reflected — this is useful for interferometry.

Contrary to popular belief, one-way mirrors that function well between equally lit rooms do not exist.

Decoration

Mirrors, typically large and unframed, are frequently used in interior decoration to create an illusion of space, and amplify the apparent size of a room.

A decorative reflecting sphere of thin metal-coated glass, working as a reducing wide-angle mirror, is sold as a Christmas tree decoration called a bauble.

Signaling

With the sun as light source, a mirror can be used to signal, by variations in the orientation of the mirror. The signal can be used over long distances, possibly up to 60 kilometres on a clear day. This technique was used by Native American tribes and numerous militaries to transmit information between distant outposts.

Entertainment

The hall of mirrors, commonly found in amusement parks, is an attraction in which a number of distorted mirrors are used to produce unusual reflections of the visitor.

Mirrors are often used in magic to create an illusion.

Illuminated rotating disco balls covered with small mirrors are used to cast moving spots of light around a dance floor.

Anamorphosis

One kind of anamorphosis has an interposed cylindrical or conical mirror making it possible to apprehend an image which is the reflexion of a deformed image conceived for this purpose. The deformed image is painted on a plane surface surrounding the mirror. By looking uniquely into the mirror, the image appears undeformed. Current in the 17th and 18th centuries, this process of anamorphosis made it possible to diffuse caricatures, erotic and scatologic scenes and scenes of sorcery for a confidential public.

Mirrors in literature

In Greek mythology, the hero Perseus killed Medusa by using a mirrored shield so as not to gaze upon her monstrous appearance.

In English literature, a famous example is Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass, in which protagonist Alice uses a mirror as a portal to a strange alternate world.

Another example is found in the fairy tale Snow White, in which the Wicked Queen consults a magic mirror to determine the identity of the most beautiful woman in the world.

Mirrors, along with labyrinths, figure prominently in the work of Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, who often used them as symbols of infinity, impersonation, and illusion. In Dreamtigers, he writes of fearing that his reflection would move independently or change shape before his eyes. In Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius, a fictional heresiarch declares that "mirrors and copulation are abominable, since they both multiply the numbers of men."

Similarly, Edgar Allan Poe expresses an aversion to mirrors in The Philosophy of Furniture:

"[R]egarded apart from its reflection, the mirror presents a continuous, flat, colourless, unrelieved surface, – a thing always and obviously unpleasant. Considered as a reflector, it is potent in producing a monstrous and odious uniformity: and the evil is here aggravated, not in merely direct proportion with the augmentation of its sources, but in a ratio constantly increasing. In fact, a room with four or five mirrors arranged at random, is, for all purposes of artistic show, a room of no shape at all. If we add to this evil, the attendant glitter upon glitter, we have a perfect farrago of discordant and displeasing effects."

The King in the Window works off some of the concepts laid out by Lewis Carroll to develop its own tale of a war between the benevolent habitants of windows and the soul-stealing Master of Mirrors.

In the Harry Potter series of novels, the Mirror of Erised is a magic mirror that reflects its viewer's deepest desires.

In numerous cartoons, mirrors are often employed to trick both heroes and villains, as well as reflecting laser-like beams back at their source.

In lucid dreams, mirrors can be used for a variety of things, often to teleport to other places, or even transformation. (See lucid dreaming websites for more info.)

Bibliography

  • On reflection, Jonathan Miller. National Gallery Publications Limited. 1998

See also

External links

cs:Zrcadlo da:Spejl de:Spiegel es:Espejo eo:Spegulo fa:آینه fr:Miroir id:Cermin it:Specchio he:מראה nl:Spiegel (optica) ja:鏡 no:Speil nn:Spegel pl:Lustro pt:Espelho ru:Зеркало simple:Mirror sl:Zrcalo fi:Peili sv:Spegel tr:Ayna (cam) zh:鏡子