HTML/CSS Mirrors.html"New Mirrors: Amazing Designs & Uses

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The discussion revolves around the intriguing properties of a unique concave mirror featured in a New Scientist article. Participants express initial confusion about the mirror's image, particularly why letters are not reversed or upside-down. It is clarified that the mirror is cylindrically concave rather than spherically concave, which affects the image orientation. The conversation touches on personal experiences with mirrors, including the disorientation caused by corner mirrors where reflections do not follow typical reversal patterns. Additionally, the technical aspect of achieving a non-distorted image through careful positioning is highlighted. The mirror's design, created by mathematician Andrew Hicks using computer algorithms, is noted for its complex surface that curves in various directions, contributing to its fascinating visual effects.
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http://www.newscientist.com/gallery/dn16585-amazing-mirrors/1 (links to this and more)
http://www.math.drexel.edu/~ahicks/
 
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At first I thought it was a lot cooler...I though it object's image was rotated. That would be nuts.
 
Last edited:
Nice. Took me a few minutes to figure it out.

It's a cylindrical mirror.
 
It's a concave mirror, I'm not sure I understand the fascination? :shy:
 
Oh, the phone book. One day, I too will understand the geometry of spacetime. But not today. Too busy.
 
redargon said:
It's a concave mirror, I'm not sure I understand the fascination? :shy:

The fascination: why are the letters in the mirror not reversed or upside-down?

Hint: a spherically concave mirror would flip the letters upside-down.
 
because it's cylindrically concave, not spherically concave, but you can see that by looking at the top cross section. It is pretty cool though. I used to love messing around with mirrors and trying to make things like periscopes with compact mirrors and toilet roll cardboard tubes. My mo used to get a little pissed that I was dismantling her compacts though :smile:

It's a little bit like those corner mirrors you get in bathrooms some times (a mirror on each wall in a corner). They used to freak me out, because your reflection isn't reversed. so if you raise your right hand, your reflection raises "his" right hand too. After years of learning how to comb your hair "in reverse" in a normal mirror and then stepping into a bathroom with one of these and your brain has to have a double take :-p
 
And, robphy was careful to find the spot where horizontal and vertical magnifications were equal in magnitude, but opposite in sign, to get a non-distorted image of the book.

Note also the stuff going on with the hole images, that are either behind or in front of the "focal point". The mirror's shadow has an interesting image as well.
 
Unfortunately they choose a poor image to show this effect - New Scientist is a British publication, British books have the spine printed the other way around (title reads top-down) It confused us for a while!
 
  • #10
Sheesh, I completely missed the links in robphy's OP, and assumed robphy took the photo! :redface:
 
  • #11
Redbelly98 said:
Sheesh, I completely missed the links in robphy's OP, and assumed robphy took the photo! :redface:

I was about to say
it wasn't me who took the photo... but you already discovered that. :smile:
 
  • #12
I also thought it was a simple cylindrical mirror, but this suggests otherwise:

(Andrew) Hicks, a mathematician at Drexel University, Philadelphia, used computer algorithms to generate the mirror's bizarre surface, which curves and bends in different directions.
 

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