How Do Curved Mirrors Form Clear Images?

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Curved mirrors, particularly spherical mirrors, can produce clear images under specific conditions, primarily when the curvature is gentle and symmetric. However, spherical mirrors often result in spherical aberration, leading to less sharp images compared to parabolic mirrors, which are designed to eliminate such distortions. The discussion highlights that spherical mirrors can reflect images without distortion if the object being reflected is on a sphere with the same center. Conversely, using a plane or parabolic mirror to reflect something drawn on a sphere can introduce distortions. Understanding these principles is crucial for optimizing image clarity in optics.
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My Optics text shows how the light rays reflecting off a spherical mirror appear to have been emitted from a single point, hence producing a well-formed image. The text then says that this is true "for any mirror whose curvature is gentle enough and that is symmetric with respect to rotation about the perpendicular line passing through its center". I was wondering if anyone had a proof for this statement.
 
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I won't offer a proof, but I will make a comment that might shed some light on what they mean by the statement. One thing to realize is that spherical mirrors do not exactly form sharp images, but parabolic mirrors do. The use of spherical mirrors is just a practical convenience. The distortion due to using a spherical mirror is called spherical aberration. For simple optics, such complications are often ignored. (The so-called paraxial approximation is used.) The flatter the mirror (the less spherical and more parabolic) the less the effect of spherical aberration.
 
Are parabolas the only mirror shape that leave no aberrations?
 
dEdt said:
Are parabolas the only mirror shape that leave no aberrations?

It depends on the curvature of what your reflecting. If you drew a picture on the inside of a large sphere, which has the same center as the smaller spherical mirror, then the spherical mirror will not produce any distortion. Sphereical mirrors produce distortion when the thing you reflect isn't on a sphere with the same center. Conversely, if you had something drawn on the surface of a sphere and reflected it in a plane or parabolic mirror it would have distortions.
 
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