Is a Flat Mirror Capable of Producing a Real Image?

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A flat mirror can redirect light from a projector to produce a real image on a screen, despite common definitions suggesting flat mirrors do not create real images. The projector's lens is responsible for generating the image, while the mirror simply alters its path. When viewing an image projected onto a screen, it is classified as real, as opposed to the virtual images seen when looking directly into a mirror. The distinction between real and virtual images is not inherently tied to the presence of mirrors. Understanding this concept clarifies how a flat mirror can still be part of a system that produces real images.
Kevin Willis
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I am struggling on one concept that I can't find when doing a thorough search.

System: You have a projector (known to project real images onto a screen). The projector expands light with a lens, the light propagates to a flat mirror on a wall and reflects onto a screen.Conclusion: Although the image may appear distorted, it is real. It originated from a point and expanded before reflecting onto a screen.So, if that conclusion is right, then how is it that a flat mirror can be used a system that produces a real image when every definition basically says "no flat mirrors in a real image system"?

If the conclusion is wrong and in the system here the image is now virtual, then should I conclude that anything reflected off a flat mirror is virtual? Also, does this mean that a laser shining on a screen is real but a laser shining off a flat mirror on a screen is virtual (same concept, but just double checking)?
 
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It can't. Either the mirror is curved, or there is a pinhole you left out.
 
When you look through a mirror, you see a virtual image. You aren't looking through a mirror in this setup. You are looking at a screen. Any time you look at an image projected onto a screen, you are looking at a real image.
 
K^2 said:
When you look through a mirror, you see a virtual image. You aren't looking through a mirror in this setup. You are looking at a screen. Any time you look at an image projected onto a screen, you are looking at a real image.

Thanks, I think I understand the concept completely now.
 
In your projector, the lens produces the image. The mirror simply redirects the light so the image appears in a different location than it otherwise would. If you remove the mirror, and maybe cut a hole in the projector, you can probably get an image somewhere, maybe on the ceiling or on a different wall.
 
Kevin Willis said:
So, if that conclusion is right, then how is it that a flat mirror can be used a system that produces a real image when every definition basically says "no flat mirrors in a real image system"?

This was where you went wrong. I have never read this in any textbook. The connection between real / virtual has nothing, fundamentally, to do with mirrors or no mirrors.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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