ashishsinghal said:
Why do we need multiple light rays from a point to gather its image. Why can't it be done with a single ray?
There are rays going in all directions from the source, whether or not we draw them on paper. Every ray that meets your eye contributes to what you see.
If all of those rays meet your eye at the same point, you see a point-like object.
If all those rays meet your eye in almost the same point, you see a blurry object.
If those rays meet your eyes everywhere, you just see light without any discernible shape.
We call the place where the first case happens the "image" because if our eye is there, we see something that actually looks like the source.
What happens when two rays (from same point) meet that make its image visible?
Every ray that passes through the ideal lens passes through the image. We draw two rays because that's enough information to find it.
Maybe an example with reflection would be easier to understand.
Suppose we have a lamp with a light-bulb.
If the lamp shines on a mirror and we look, we see a light-bulb because the light is hitting our eye in only one place coming from one direction.
If the lamp shines on a wall, we see an illuminated wall rather than a light-bulb, because the light is hitting our eye everywhere from all directions.