An image 60.0 mm long is formed on a wall located 2.30 m away from a source of
light 20.0 mm high. What is the magnification? What is the focal length of this
mirror? Is it diverging or converging?
(-3.00, 0.862 m)​

Respuesta :

Missing info in the text: the image is inverted

1) Magnification: -3

The magnification can be calculated with the equation

[tex]M=\frac{y'}{y}[/tex]

where

y' is the size of the image

y is the size of the object

In this problem, we have

y' = -60.0 mm (the sign is negative since the image is inverted)

y = 20.0 mm

Substituting,

[tex]M=\frac{-60}{20}=-3[/tex]

2) Focal length: 0.862 m (converging)

We can also rewrite the magnification as follows

[tex]M=-\frac{q}{p}[/tex] (1)

where

q is the distance of the image  from the mirror

p is the distance of the image from the mirror

Here we know that the distance between the image and the object is 2.30 m, so

[tex]q-p=2.30[/tex]

which means

[tex]q=p+2.30[/tex]

Substituting into (1), we can find p:

[tex]M=-3=-\frac{p+2.30}{p}\\3p=p+2.30\\2p = 2.30\\p = 1.15 m[/tex]

And also q:

[tex]q=p+2.30=1.15+2.30 = 3.45 m[/tex]

So now we can finally find the focal length by using the lens equation:

[tex]\frac{1}{f}=\frac{1}{p}+\frac{1}{q}[/tex]

Where f is the focal length. Solving for f,

[tex]f=\frac{pq}{p+q}=\frac{(1.15)(3.45)}{1.15+3.45}=0.862 m[/tex]

And since the focal length is positive, it means that the mirror is converging.