Mirrors and Reflection: The Mysterious Maths

  • Thread starter Thread starter lvlastermind
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Mirrors Reflection
AI Thread Summary
Mirrors do not switch left and right; they reverse front and back. When viewing oneself in a mirror, the left hand remains on the left side, but the orientation of the hand appears reversed due to the front-to-back reversal. This phenomenon is often misunderstood as a left-right switch. For example, when holding an object in the right hand, it still appears on the right side of the mirror. Experiments, such as drawing axes or letters on hands, further illustrate that while the appearance of objects may change, their relative positions do not. The confusion arises from the perception of handedness rather than an actual lateral switch.
lvlastermind
Messages
101
Reaction score
0
I wasn't sure where to post this and i apologize if its already been posted. I think there is an obvious answer for this but for some reason I cannot figure out a consistent answer. I am looking for a mathematical answer more than anything else. When you look in a mirror you image is switched and non-superimposable. i.e. your left hand is reflected as your right. How come a mirror does not switch in the plane of top to bottom? How come your feet aren't where your head is and vice versa?

thanks...
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Answer:

A mirror does not reverse left and right. Things that are on your right in the real world are on your right in the mirror world. What a mirror changes is front to back. For instance, hold your arm out with your palm toward you and look in a mirror. In the real world, your palm is in front of the back of your hand. But in the mirror, the back of your hand is in front of the palm. In other words, the mirror reverses objects along a line perpendicular to the surface. Because a mirror changes front to back, it also changes something called handedness. That is, a left hand will look like a right hand. However, it will still be on your left.

eom
 
it is a wrong notion that left and right get switched.only the front and back directions are reversed. Just take a paper draw x,y and z axes , hold in front of the mirror and see it for yourself.
 
abeen said:
it is a wrong notion that left and right get switched.only the front and back directions are reversed. Just take a paper draw x,y and z axes , hold in front of the mirror and see it for yourself.
I didn't do as you asked, but I know what would happen if I did. The x axis, which points to the right because I draw these things in a conventional manner, also points to the right in the mirror. The y axis, which I would draw pointing up, continues to point up, and the z axis which I would draw pointing toward me (I used 3-d paper to draw on) points away from me in the mirror.
 
abeen said:
it is a wrong notion that left and right get switched.only the front and back directions are reversed. Just take a paper draw x,y and z axes , hold in front of the mirror and see it for yourself.
I didn't do as you asked, but I know what would happen if I did. The x axis, which points to the right because I draw these things in a conventional manner, also points to the right in the mirror. The y axis, which I would draw pointing up, continues to point up, and the z axis which I would draw pointing toward me (I used 3-d paper to draw on) points away from me in the mirror.

Edit: Actually, I did do the experiment. I drew the x-axis to the right as I normally do, but when I turned the paper around to present it to the mirror, it was now pointing to the left. This has nothing to do with the mirror, it happened when I turned the paper around. Is this the problem you are having?

Second edit. While standing before a mirror, hold an object in your right hand. Is it on the right hand side of the mirror, or the left hand side?

Third edit, best experiment of all. Draw the letter R on the back of your right hand and the letter L on the back of your left hand. Now hold the backs of your hands to the mirror. Your right hand will still be on the right and your left hand on the left. The letter R does not become an L, it becomes a backwards R.
 
Last edited:
Similar to the 2024 thread, here I start the 2025 thread. As always it is getting increasingly difficult to predict, so I will make a list based on other article predictions. You can also leave your prediction here. Here are the predictions of 2024 that did not make it: Peter Shor, David Deutsch and all the rest of the quantum computing community (various sources) Pablo Jarrillo Herrero, Allan McDonald and Rafi Bistritzer for magic angle in twisted graphene (various sources) Christoph...
Back
Top