Why can't we see images reflected on a piece of paper?












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Why can't you see a reflected image on a piece of paper? Say you put a pen in front of the paper, even when light rays are coming from other sources, hitting the pen, reflecting back, and hitting the paper, there is no reflection.



What's wrong with the following "ray diagram" and why such even don't happen and the image of the pen don't form on the paper (right side is a paper)?



enter image description here



When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?



When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?










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  • 1




    In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
    – craq
    Nov 29 '18 at 3:40












  • Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
    – phresnel
    Nov 29 '18 at 8:04










  • +1 for the drawing
    – alseether
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:20






  • 1




    Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
    – a concerned citizen
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:47
















66














Why can't you see a reflected image on a piece of paper? Say you put a pen in front of the paper, even when light rays are coming from other sources, hitting the pen, reflecting back, and hitting the paper, there is no reflection.



What's wrong with the following "ray diagram" and why such even don't happen and the image of the pen don't form on the paper (right side is a paper)?



enter image description here



When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?



When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 1




    In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
    – craq
    Nov 29 '18 at 3:40












  • Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
    – phresnel
    Nov 29 '18 at 8:04










  • +1 for the drawing
    – alseether
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:20






  • 1




    Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
    – a concerned citizen
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:47














66












66








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Why can't you see a reflected image on a piece of paper? Say you put a pen in front of the paper, even when light rays are coming from other sources, hitting the pen, reflecting back, and hitting the paper, there is no reflection.



What's wrong with the following "ray diagram" and why such even don't happen and the image of the pen don't form on the paper (right side is a paper)?



enter image description here



When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?



When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?










share|cite|improve this question















Why can't you see a reflected image on a piece of paper? Say you put a pen in front of the paper, even when light rays are coming from other sources, hitting the pen, reflecting back, and hitting the paper, there is no reflection.



What's wrong with the following "ray diagram" and why such even don't happen and the image of the pen don't form on the paper (right side is a paper)?



enter image description here



When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?



When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?







optics everyday-life reflection






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edited Nov 27 '18 at 21:08









DaveInCaz

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1289










asked Nov 27 '18 at 10:12









alxchen

5771310




5771310








  • 1




    In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
    – craq
    Nov 29 '18 at 3:40












  • Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
    – phresnel
    Nov 29 '18 at 8:04










  • +1 for the drawing
    – alseether
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:20






  • 1




    Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
    – a concerned citizen
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:47














  • 1




    In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
    – craq
    Nov 29 '18 at 3:40












  • Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
    – phresnel
    Nov 29 '18 at 8:04










  • +1 for the drawing
    – alseether
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:20






  • 1




    Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
    – a concerned citizen
    Nov 29 '18 at 15:47








1




1




In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
– craq
Nov 29 '18 at 3:40






In case your question is about the difference between the reflectiveness of paper and mirrors (diffuse and specular) you might want to have a look at the wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_reflection.
– craq
Nov 29 '18 at 3:40














Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
– phresnel
Nov 29 '18 at 8:04




Some kinds of paper are actually pretty reflective (apart from the whiteness, which proves the reflectance already) - typically the not-so-environment-friendly-very-bleached kind of paper. If you take the pencil and lay it down on the paper, you may see it. A second effect that then becomes apparent is when you minimize the angle to the paper plane - it will become more mirrorly then (same effect as on a long, hot summer road).
– phresnel
Nov 29 '18 at 8:04












+1 for the drawing
– alseether
Nov 29 '18 at 15:20




+1 for the drawing
– alseether
Nov 29 '18 at 15:20




1




1




Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
– a concerned citizen
Nov 29 '18 at 15:47




Why paper and not mousepad, or bed sheets, or brick wall? What does a mirror, or a polished silver plate, or the surface of water have that those don't?
– a concerned citizen
Nov 29 '18 at 15:47










9 Answers
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Because the real situation looks a lot more like this:



Diagram of diffuse light scattering from a pen onto nearby paper



Your pen is (presumably) not made of mirror-like polished metal, but rather of something like wood or plastic that reflects light diffusely. This means that the light from each part of the pen is scattered all over the paper (and, of course, in other directions too), so it won't project a clear image onto the paper.



(And since the paper itself is also a diffuse reflector, all the light that hits it gets scattered in all directions again, and some of it ends up hitting your eye. If you replaced the paper with a mirror, then only those rays that were coming from just the right direction would have a chance of getting reflected towards your eye, and so you'd see a sharp reflected image.)





OK, so why won't the pen at least form a blurred image on the paper, then? Well, actually it does.



Here's a photo I just took with my cellphone. Sorry that it's a bit dark, I wanted to make sure I didn't burn out any highlights.



Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper



If you look closely and carefully, you can see just the slightest hint of yellowish color on the paper near the pencil, and a hint of red near the pen. Those faint colors are caused by light reflecting off the pen and the pencil onto the paper. But they're not very bright, because most of the light hitting the paper is still coming from other directions (primarily, from the lamp illuminating the scene), and not very distinct, because the light that does reflect off the pen and the pencil gets spread in all directions.



Just in case you can't see it clearly on your screen, here's the same photo with the color levels adjusted for maximum contrast:



Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper, colors adjusted



There, I bet you can see it now. It almost looks as if the pen and the pencil were glowing... which, of course, technically they are. Not with their own light, of course, but with light reflected from the lamp that illuminates them, just like e.g. the moon glows with reflected sunlight.



As a bonus, if you look carefully, you can also see some brighter spots on the paper near the pencil. Those are specular reflections from the glossy print on the pencil. So we actually have both diffuse and specular reflection demonstrated in the same picture.






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  • 19




    This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
    – Cort Ammon
    Nov 27 '18 at 19:29






  • 7




    @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
    – Ruslan
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:46








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    @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
    – Ilmari Karonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 13:01






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    Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
    – CJ Dennis
    Nov 29 '18 at 1:51






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    @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
    – user21820
    Nov 29 '18 at 14:07



















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You will not see a real image of the pen forming on the paper, nor will you see a virtual image from the reflection of the pen from the paper.



The reason you will not see a real image forming on the paper is that the light scattering from the pen is diverging, and in order to see an image all rays from a single point on the pen must converge onto a single point on the paper. That's why placing a converging lens at the right place will form an image.



The reason you will not see a virtual image from reflection is that the reflection from the paper is diffusive and not specular, i.e. the incident rays are scattered randomly instead 'angle of incident equals to the angle of reflection'.






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  • Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
    – Ed999
    Nov 28 '18 at 7:32










  • Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
    – alxchen
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:14






  • 2




    @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
    – JiK
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:32










  • @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
    – JiK
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:37










  • @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
    – JiK
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:39



















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A real image forms when multiple rays from the same point meet at again at another point. Without optical element, the rays just go in their own different directions and don't meet again. So there is no image.




When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?




Because a convex lens bends the rays so that the diverging rays originating from any given point on the pen—as long as it is further than the focal point—start to converge on the other side. The basic rules say that a ray passing through the centre of the lens passes straight and a ray passing parallel to the optical axis on one side passes through the focal point.



These rules allow you to trace three different rays through the lens and where they intersect on the other side, there is the real image (which you can see iff it coincides with a piece of paper). You could trace the other rays too, but that requires more advanced analytical geometry.




When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?




I you are talking about a real torch—as in a stick with a piece of burning rag wound around one end—you won't. You'll only see a more brightly illuminated spot where the paper is closer to the torch.



If you are talking about the electric kind, most of them are reflectors, that is they have a parabolic mirror mounted behind the light emitting element.



The mirror should be mounted so that the light emitting element is closer to the mirror than the focal point, in which case there is no real image, but a virtual image behind the mirror. Virtual image can be seen directly if the light is not too bright to look directly into it.



However sometimes the mirror is mounted too far from the light element—or can be positioned there in the variable focus lights—and then there is a real image ahead of the light you can project on a paper.






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  • Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
    – alxchen
    Nov 28 '18 at 12:15






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    @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
    – Jan Hudec
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:01





















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In a mirror light is highly likely to reflect only in one angle according to the "law of reflection" ( I have no idea of why that is though ). On a paper it is likely to also reflect in all other directions. Therefore, on the paper, the image of the pencil is drowned out from the light hitting it from all other points in the environment. The light from each point on the pen will hit each point on the paper, and thus contribute to diffuse the image of itself.



With a lens, you will only be able to see the image of the pen on the paper, if the only light that hits the paper is coming through the lens, or at least other light is sufficiently dim. Also the lens must be at the correct distance so it will focus all light coming from one point on the pen to one point on the paper. The reason you see a picture in that case, is because for each point on the paper, there is only one point on the pen (or whatever else is out there) as seen from the point of the lens, that will hit each point on the paper. This means that all light reflected from that point on the paper is coming only from one point on the pen.



A torch will send directed light, thus light from one point on the torch only hits one part of the paper. Since the light is a lot brighter than the light coming from the environment, the light that hits your eye, will come from only the one point on the torch, thus recreating the round circle of the torch.



Here are som drawings to illustrate. Blue are the rays that hits the eye, while red misses the eye.



Pen to paper: (light from one point is illuminating all parts of the paper)
enter image description here



Pen to mirror: (light from one point is reflected in only one direction for each incidence angle)
enter image description here



Pen through lens: (the lens bends the incoming light so that for a given distance ratio between the pen and paper, each point illuminates only one point on the paper)
enter image description here



Torch: (directional light illuminates only one point on the paper for each point on the torch)
enter image description here






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  • This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
    – wizzwizz4
    Dec 1 '18 at 8:53



















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There are several things going on that make a mirror and paper reflect light differently.



First, if you examine the surface of the paper under a microscope you will see a very rough surface. This roughness has the effect of scattering the light. Imagine trying to play ping pong on a table covered with rocks of all sizes. The ping pong ball would bounce unpredictably. The mirror, in contrast, is very smooth to light and so light can bounce off in a predictable direction.



Another difference is the electrical conductivity of the material. Light is electromagnetic and interacts with electrons, changing their motion. Most electrons are bound to particular atoms and so their range of motion is limited. Electrical conductors additionally have some electrons that can freely swim around among the atoms. This additional mobility is visible to us by causing metals to have their luster. The silver in the mirror is a great conductor of electricity, and the glass keeps the silver smooth and protects it from being tarnished by air. The combination results in an extremely smooth surface with maximum metallic luster.



In contrast, the paper is exhibiting another phenomenon. Light can be absorbed and its energy re-emitted as a color that has more to do with the material than the source of the light. This can be seen by examining many things under black (ultraviolet) light. Some objects will seem very dark. Others will glow white or a particular color under UV light even though the black light bulb does not provide that wavelength of light. This is particularly true of artificial products and their packaging that are tuned to be attractive to people. For example, compare paper and styrofoam that are both white under ordinary lighting. Under UV light, the paper will typically glow bright white but the styrofoam will appear dark and dull. This happens because the paper absorbs invisible UV energy and becomes a source of visible light. Some of this happens under ordinary lighting too and contributes to the brightness of the paper.






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  • This. This is the correct answer.
    – rubenvb
    Dec 2 '18 at 11:56



















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The light scatters off the pen in all possible directions with similar intensity, so one point of the paper is illuminated with scattered light from all points of the pen and one gets a very blurry image. Better image can be got only if somehow the point on paper gets light only from some point or only a small area on the pen, such as when using a lens or a camera obscura: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura






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    A reflective or polished surface respects and preserves the angular proximity of incoming beams on its points. The less the angular proximity of incoming intensity is preserved in the outgoing intensity profile, the more diffuse and "matte" looks the surface






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      (I am the OP, and here's the explanation which I can make out from the answers. I am not sure if this correct or not even wrong, can someone point it out ?)



      We see an object X when light from other sources reflect on X and reflects back to our eyes/the object X itself emants light. There are two factors which governs whether we can see an object's reflection on a screen (sheet/mirror etc)




      1. The intensity of the light emanting from X

      2. The reflection at the surface or the screen.


      In the case of paper and the pen (1) is low, and scattered reflection in random direction for (2) makes it even lower, that's why the the reflection is barely visible.



      In the case of paper and the flashlight, while (2) is same, (1) is pretty high so we can see the flashlight in the screen. For a laser, (2) is even more intense, that's why even a small beam of laser can be seen clearly from all direction (the scattered reflection in (1) makes seeing uniformly from all directions possible).



      In the case of paper and the pen with a convex lens, while (2) and (1) are both same, the convex lens focuses every ray emanting from the pen to a single point in the screen (well this is an approximation but roughly OK), which makes the intensity very high. Now the thing is same as the that of the pepper and the laser light.






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      • I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
        – morten
        Dec 3 '18 at 7:43










      • With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
        – morten
        Dec 3 '18 at 8:08










      • As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
        – morten
        Dec 3 '18 at 8:16





















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      I can't believe how much nonsense has been posted here and how many up-votes have been awarded to answers that are nonsense. We are told that it's because the pen isn't polished like a mirror rather than because the paper isn't polished like a mirror. That fails to explain why you can see a reflection of the same pen in a mirror.



      Light falling on a mirror is reflected in such a direction that the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. Light falling on a white sheet of paper is reflected but scattered, going in all directions from the point where it hits the paper.






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      • I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
        – morten
        Dec 3 '18 at 7:57










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      9 Answers
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      Because the real situation looks a lot more like this:



      Diagram of diffuse light scattering from a pen onto nearby paper



      Your pen is (presumably) not made of mirror-like polished metal, but rather of something like wood or plastic that reflects light diffusely. This means that the light from each part of the pen is scattered all over the paper (and, of course, in other directions too), so it won't project a clear image onto the paper.



      (And since the paper itself is also a diffuse reflector, all the light that hits it gets scattered in all directions again, and some of it ends up hitting your eye. If you replaced the paper with a mirror, then only those rays that were coming from just the right direction would have a chance of getting reflected towards your eye, and so you'd see a sharp reflected image.)





      OK, so why won't the pen at least form a blurred image on the paper, then? Well, actually it does.



      Here's a photo I just took with my cellphone. Sorry that it's a bit dark, I wanted to make sure I didn't burn out any highlights.



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper



      If you look closely and carefully, you can see just the slightest hint of yellowish color on the paper near the pencil, and a hint of red near the pen. Those faint colors are caused by light reflecting off the pen and the pencil onto the paper. But they're not very bright, because most of the light hitting the paper is still coming from other directions (primarily, from the lamp illuminating the scene), and not very distinct, because the light that does reflect off the pen and the pencil gets spread in all directions.



      Just in case you can't see it clearly on your screen, here's the same photo with the color levels adjusted for maximum contrast:



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper, colors adjusted



      There, I bet you can see it now. It almost looks as if the pen and the pencil were glowing... which, of course, technically they are. Not with their own light, of course, but with light reflected from the lamp that illuminates them, just like e.g. the moon glows with reflected sunlight.



      As a bonus, if you look carefully, you can also see some brighter spots on the paper near the pencil. Those are specular reflections from the glossy print on the pencil. So we actually have both diffuse and specular reflection demonstrated in the same picture.






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      • 19




        This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
        – Cort Ammon
        Nov 27 '18 at 19:29






      • 7




        @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
        – Ruslan
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:46








      • 5




        @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
        – Ilmari Karonen
        Nov 28 '18 at 13:01






      • 4




        Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
        – CJ Dennis
        Nov 29 '18 at 1:51






      • 2




        @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
        – user21820
        Nov 29 '18 at 14:07
















      165














      Because the real situation looks a lot more like this:



      Diagram of diffuse light scattering from a pen onto nearby paper



      Your pen is (presumably) not made of mirror-like polished metal, but rather of something like wood or plastic that reflects light diffusely. This means that the light from each part of the pen is scattered all over the paper (and, of course, in other directions too), so it won't project a clear image onto the paper.



      (And since the paper itself is also a diffuse reflector, all the light that hits it gets scattered in all directions again, and some of it ends up hitting your eye. If you replaced the paper with a mirror, then only those rays that were coming from just the right direction would have a chance of getting reflected towards your eye, and so you'd see a sharp reflected image.)





      OK, so why won't the pen at least form a blurred image on the paper, then? Well, actually it does.



      Here's a photo I just took with my cellphone. Sorry that it's a bit dark, I wanted to make sure I didn't burn out any highlights.



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper



      If you look closely and carefully, you can see just the slightest hint of yellowish color on the paper near the pencil, and a hint of red near the pen. Those faint colors are caused by light reflecting off the pen and the pencil onto the paper. But they're not very bright, because most of the light hitting the paper is still coming from other directions (primarily, from the lamp illuminating the scene), and not very distinct, because the light that does reflect off the pen and the pencil gets spread in all directions.



      Just in case you can't see it clearly on your screen, here's the same photo with the color levels adjusted for maximum contrast:



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper, colors adjusted



      There, I bet you can see it now. It almost looks as if the pen and the pencil were glowing... which, of course, technically they are. Not with their own light, of course, but with light reflected from the lamp that illuminates them, just like e.g. the moon glows with reflected sunlight.



      As a bonus, if you look carefully, you can also see some brighter spots on the paper near the pencil. Those are specular reflections from the glossy print on the pencil. So we actually have both diffuse and specular reflection demonstrated in the same picture.






      share|cite|improve this answer



















      • 19




        This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
        – Cort Ammon
        Nov 27 '18 at 19:29






      • 7




        @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
        – Ruslan
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:46








      • 5




        @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
        – Ilmari Karonen
        Nov 28 '18 at 13:01






      • 4




        Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
        – CJ Dennis
        Nov 29 '18 at 1:51






      • 2




        @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
        – user21820
        Nov 29 '18 at 14:07














      165












      165








      165






      Because the real situation looks a lot more like this:



      Diagram of diffuse light scattering from a pen onto nearby paper



      Your pen is (presumably) not made of mirror-like polished metal, but rather of something like wood or plastic that reflects light diffusely. This means that the light from each part of the pen is scattered all over the paper (and, of course, in other directions too), so it won't project a clear image onto the paper.



      (And since the paper itself is also a diffuse reflector, all the light that hits it gets scattered in all directions again, and some of it ends up hitting your eye. If you replaced the paper with a mirror, then only those rays that were coming from just the right direction would have a chance of getting reflected towards your eye, and so you'd see a sharp reflected image.)





      OK, so why won't the pen at least form a blurred image on the paper, then? Well, actually it does.



      Here's a photo I just took with my cellphone. Sorry that it's a bit dark, I wanted to make sure I didn't burn out any highlights.



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper



      If you look closely and carefully, you can see just the slightest hint of yellowish color on the paper near the pencil, and a hint of red near the pen. Those faint colors are caused by light reflecting off the pen and the pencil onto the paper. But they're not very bright, because most of the light hitting the paper is still coming from other directions (primarily, from the lamp illuminating the scene), and not very distinct, because the light that does reflect off the pen and the pencil gets spread in all directions.



      Just in case you can't see it clearly on your screen, here's the same photo with the color levels adjusted for maximum contrast:



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper, colors adjusted



      There, I bet you can see it now. It almost looks as if the pen and the pencil were glowing... which, of course, technically they are. Not with their own light, of course, but with light reflected from the lamp that illuminates them, just like e.g. the moon glows with reflected sunlight.



      As a bonus, if you look carefully, you can also see some brighter spots on the paper near the pencil. Those are specular reflections from the glossy print on the pencil. So we actually have both diffuse and specular reflection demonstrated in the same picture.






      share|cite|improve this answer














      Because the real situation looks a lot more like this:



      Diagram of diffuse light scattering from a pen onto nearby paper



      Your pen is (presumably) not made of mirror-like polished metal, but rather of something like wood or plastic that reflects light diffusely. This means that the light from each part of the pen is scattered all over the paper (and, of course, in other directions too), so it won't project a clear image onto the paper.



      (And since the paper itself is also a diffuse reflector, all the light that hits it gets scattered in all directions again, and some of it ends up hitting your eye. If you replaced the paper with a mirror, then only those rays that were coming from just the right direction would have a chance of getting reflected towards your eye, and so you'd see a sharp reflected image.)





      OK, so why won't the pen at least form a blurred image on the paper, then? Well, actually it does.



      Here's a photo I just took with my cellphone. Sorry that it's a bit dark, I wanted to make sure I didn't burn out any highlights.



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper



      If you look closely and carefully, you can see just the slightest hint of yellowish color on the paper near the pencil, and a hint of red near the pen. Those faint colors are caused by light reflecting off the pen and the pencil onto the paper. But they're not very bright, because most of the light hitting the paper is still coming from other directions (primarily, from the lamp illuminating the scene), and not very distinct, because the light that does reflect off the pen and the pencil gets spread in all directions.



      Just in case you can't see it clearly on your screen, here's the same photo with the color levels adjusted for maximum contrast:



      Photo of yellow pencil and red ballpoint pen on white paper, colors adjusted



      There, I bet you can see it now. It almost looks as if the pen and the pencil were glowing... which, of course, technically they are. Not with their own light, of course, but with light reflected from the lamp that illuminates them, just like e.g. the moon glows with reflected sunlight.



      As a bonus, if you look carefully, you can also see some brighter spots on the paper near the pencil. Those are specular reflections from the glossy print on the pencil. So we actually have both diffuse and specular reflection demonstrated in the same picture.







      share|cite|improve this answer














      share|cite|improve this answer



      share|cite|improve this answer








      edited Nov 27 '18 at 17:46

























      answered Nov 27 '18 at 17:37









      Ilmari Karonen

      10.5k32633




      10.5k32633








      • 19




        This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
        – Cort Ammon
        Nov 27 '18 at 19:29






      • 7




        @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
        – Ruslan
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:46








      • 5




        @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
        – Ilmari Karonen
        Nov 28 '18 at 13:01






      • 4




        Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
        – CJ Dennis
        Nov 29 '18 at 1:51






      • 2




        @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
        – user21820
        Nov 29 '18 at 14:07














      • 19




        This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
        – Cort Ammon
        Nov 27 '18 at 19:29






      • 7




        @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
        – Ruslan
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:46








      • 5




        @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
        – Ilmari Karonen
        Nov 28 '18 at 13:01






      • 4




        Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
        – CJ Dennis
        Nov 29 '18 at 1:51






      • 2




        @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
        – user21820
        Nov 29 '18 at 14:07








      19




      19




      This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
      – Cort Ammon
      Nov 27 '18 at 19:29




      This effect is also a very important one in the world of 3d rendering. One of the things the very popular Cornell Box test demonstrates is that light reflected off of a colored wall does indeed affect the apparent color of nearby objects because the whole wall acts as a light source. Doing this in 3d rendering typically involves Photon Mapping, which is a technique that basically models all the scattered photons you showed in your first picture.
      – Cort Ammon
      Nov 27 '18 at 19:29




      7




      7




      @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
      – Ruslan
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:46






      @alxchen for the same reason that we also see the light reflected from the pen on the paper (see the second photo in this answer). It's just more apparent because it's more intense, since the flashlight is a source of the light (and a bright one!), while the pen only reflects the light which hits it, usually having come from a faraway source of light, thus considerably attenuated.
      – Ruslan
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:46






      5




      5




      @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
      – Ilmari Karonen
      Nov 28 '18 at 13:01




      @alxchen: You can totally see the light from a glow stick reflecting off a wall, at least if it's dark enough and you bring the glow stick close enough to the wall. But it won't be very bright, because glow sticks usually aren't that bright, and it'll be quite fuzzy because, unlike a flashlight, the glow stick is emitting light in all directions. Actually, just putting your hand between the glow stick and the wall might make it easier to see, since the shadow of your hand would provide some contrast. Or roll some paper into a tube, put the glow stick inside and point the tube at the wall.
      – Ilmari Karonen
      Nov 28 '18 at 13:01




      4




      4




      Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
      – CJ Dennis
      Nov 29 '18 at 1:51




      Your modified image shows the rays scattering the wrong way. Replace the paper with a mirror and it doesn't matter that light scatters off the pen: you'll see a clear reflection. The light hitting the paper scatters in many directions, making it unable to form a clear image that way a mirror does. Your rays should scatter from the paper, not the pen.
      – CJ Dennis
      Nov 29 '18 at 1:51




      2




      2




      @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
      – user21820
      Nov 29 '18 at 14:07




      @morten: No. Firstly, it's not called "diffusion". Secondly, the scattering of light that hits the pen also has plenty to do with it. Compare with a laser pointer, whose beam does not diverge much, and hence you can see its sharp image on the paper. Almost all the photons went to that tiny region on the paper, from which there was scattering, but you still see the dot on the paper. In fact, the scattering of light off the paper ensured that you can see the image of the laser beam on the paper no matter which angle you looked at it, and also that you didn't go blind at any angle.
      – user21820
      Nov 29 '18 at 14:07











      13














      You will not see a real image of the pen forming on the paper, nor will you see a virtual image from the reflection of the pen from the paper.



      The reason you will not see a real image forming on the paper is that the light scattering from the pen is diverging, and in order to see an image all rays from a single point on the pen must converge onto a single point on the paper. That's why placing a converging lens at the right place will form an image.



      The reason you will not see a virtual image from reflection is that the reflection from the paper is diffusive and not specular, i.e. the incident rays are scattered randomly instead 'angle of incident equals to the angle of reflection'.






      share|cite|improve this answer























      • Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
        – Ed999
        Nov 28 '18 at 7:32










      • Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:14






      • 2




        @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:32










      • @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:37










      • @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:39
















      13














      You will not see a real image of the pen forming on the paper, nor will you see a virtual image from the reflection of the pen from the paper.



      The reason you will not see a real image forming on the paper is that the light scattering from the pen is diverging, and in order to see an image all rays from a single point on the pen must converge onto a single point on the paper. That's why placing a converging lens at the right place will form an image.



      The reason you will not see a virtual image from reflection is that the reflection from the paper is diffusive and not specular, i.e. the incident rays are scattered randomly instead 'angle of incident equals to the angle of reflection'.






      share|cite|improve this answer























      • Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
        – Ed999
        Nov 28 '18 at 7:32










      • Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:14






      • 2




        @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:32










      • @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:37










      • @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:39














      13












      13








      13






      You will not see a real image of the pen forming on the paper, nor will you see a virtual image from the reflection of the pen from the paper.



      The reason you will not see a real image forming on the paper is that the light scattering from the pen is diverging, and in order to see an image all rays from a single point on the pen must converge onto a single point on the paper. That's why placing a converging lens at the right place will form an image.



      The reason you will not see a virtual image from reflection is that the reflection from the paper is diffusive and not specular, i.e. the incident rays are scattered randomly instead 'angle of incident equals to the angle of reflection'.






      share|cite|improve this answer














      You will not see a real image of the pen forming on the paper, nor will you see a virtual image from the reflection of the pen from the paper.



      The reason you will not see a real image forming on the paper is that the light scattering from the pen is diverging, and in order to see an image all rays from a single point on the pen must converge onto a single point on the paper. That's why placing a converging lens at the right place will form an image.



      The reason you will not see a virtual image from reflection is that the reflection from the paper is diffusive and not specular, i.e. the incident rays are scattered randomly instead 'angle of incident equals to the angle of reflection'.







      share|cite|improve this answer














      share|cite|improve this answer



      share|cite|improve this answer








      edited Nov 27 '18 at 11:28

























      answered Nov 27 '18 at 10:15









      Yuval Weissler

      1,143513




      1,143513












      • Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
        – Ed999
        Nov 28 '18 at 7:32










      • Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:14






      • 2




        @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:32










      • @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:37










      • @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:39


















      • Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
        – Ed999
        Nov 28 '18 at 7:32










      • Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:14






      • 2




        @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:32










      • @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:37










      • @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
        – JiK
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:39
















      Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
      – Ed999
      Nov 28 '18 at 7:32




      Although, to our eyes, the surface of the paper appears flat and static, at the atomic level the atoms in the surface of any material are in rapid motion: the individual particles (protons, neutrons, electrons) are spinning, and are also rotating about each other. This motion is occuring at the quantum level. Motion of individual atoms is typically not co-ordinated with neighbouring atoms. Incoming light from an object (here, a pen or pencil) is absorbed, then re-emitted, but the probability of it being re-emitted in vastly different directions by adjacent atoms ("scattering") is very great.
      – Ed999
      Nov 28 '18 at 7:32












      Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
      – alxchen
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:14




      Why we can see the light from a flashlight in the paper then ?
      – alxchen
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:14




      2




      2




      @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:32




      @alxchen Because the light from a flashlight is directed to a specific area of the paper. It illuminates that part of a paper more than other parts. Note that this is not like a mirrror, the bright part in the paper doesn't move when you move your head around.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:32












      @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:37




      @alxchen See this image. The light from the flashlight goes mostly to the few centimeter wide part in center of the paper, and some of the light goes to a wider area. From that part, the light then scatters diffusively around in all directions as explained in this answer. Now if you look at the paper from any POV, you see the light scattered from the same center part.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:37












      @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:39




      @alxchen Or to put it another way: There's two parts of this answer: (1) the light from the pen is not directed but goes in all directions, (2) the reflection from the paper is not specular but diffusive, i.e., paper is not a mirror but scatters light everywhere. In the flashlight&paper case, condition 1 changes, but 2 still remains there.
      – JiK
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:39











      4














      A real image forms when multiple rays from the same point meet at again at another point. Without optical element, the rays just go in their own different directions and don't meet again. So there is no image.




      When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?




      Because a convex lens bends the rays so that the diverging rays originating from any given point on the pen—as long as it is further than the focal point—start to converge on the other side. The basic rules say that a ray passing through the centre of the lens passes straight and a ray passing parallel to the optical axis on one side passes through the focal point.



      These rules allow you to trace three different rays through the lens and where they intersect on the other side, there is the real image (which you can see iff it coincides with a piece of paper). You could trace the other rays too, but that requires more advanced analytical geometry.




      When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?




      I you are talking about a real torch—as in a stick with a piece of burning rag wound around one end—you won't. You'll only see a more brightly illuminated spot where the paper is closer to the torch.



      If you are talking about the electric kind, most of them are reflectors, that is they have a parabolic mirror mounted behind the light emitting element.



      The mirror should be mounted so that the light emitting element is closer to the mirror than the focal point, in which case there is no real image, but a virtual image behind the mirror. Virtual image can be seen directly if the light is not too bright to look directly into it.



      However sometimes the mirror is mounted too far from the light element—or can be positioned there in the variable focus lights—and then there is a real image ahead of the light you can project on a paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer





















      • Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:15






      • 2




        @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
        – Jan Hudec
        Nov 28 '18 at 15:01


















      4














      A real image forms when multiple rays from the same point meet at again at another point. Without optical element, the rays just go in their own different directions and don't meet again. So there is no image.




      When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?




      Because a convex lens bends the rays so that the diverging rays originating from any given point on the pen—as long as it is further than the focal point—start to converge on the other side. The basic rules say that a ray passing through the centre of the lens passes straight and a ray passing parallel to the optical axis on one side passes through the focal point.



      These rules allow you to trace three different rays through the lens and where they intersect on the other side, there is the real image (which you can see iff it coincides with a piece of paper). You could trace the other rays too, but that requires more advanced analytical geometry.




      When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?




      I you are talking about a real torch—as in a stick with a piece of burning rag wound around one end—you won't. You'll only see a more brightly illuminated spot where the paper is closer to the torch.



      If you are talking about the electric kind, most of them are reflectors, that is they have a parabolic mirror mounted behind the light emitting element.



      The mirror should be mounted so that the light emitting element is closer to the mirror than the focal point, in which case there is no real image, but a virtual image behind the mirror. Virtual image can be seen directly if the light is not too bright to look directly into it.



      However sometimes the mirror is mounted too far from the light element—or can be positioned there in the variable focus lights—and then there is a real image ahead of the light you can project on a paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer





















      • Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:15






      • 2




        @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
        – Jan Hudec
        Nov 28 '18 at 15:01
















      4












      4








      4






      A real image forms when multiple rays from the same point meet at again at another point. Without optical element, the rays just go in their own different directions and don't meet again. So there is no image.




      When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?




      Because a convex lens bends the rays so that the diverging rays originating from any given point on the pen—as long as it is further than the focal point—start to converge on the other side. The basic rules say that a ray passing through the centre of the lens passes straight and a ray passing parallel to the optical axis on one side passes through the focal point.



      These rules allow you to trace three different rays through the lens and where they intersect on the other side, there is the real image (which you can see iff it coincides with a piece of paper). You could trace the other rays too, but that requires more advanced analytical geometry.




      When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?




      I you are talking about a real torch—as in a stick with a piece of burning rag wound around one end—you won't. You'll only see a more brightly illuminated spot where the paper is closer to the torch.



      If you are talking about the electric kind, most of them are reflectors, that is they have a parabolic mirror mounted behind the light emitting element.



      The mirror should be mounted so that the light emitting element is closer to the mirror than the focal point, in which case there is no real image, but a virtual image behind the mirror. Virtual image can be seen directly if the light is not too bright to look directly into it.



      However sometimes the mirror is mounted too far from the light element—or can be positioned there in the variable focus lights—and then there is a real image ahead of the light you can project on a paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer












      A real image forms when multiple rays from the same point meet at again at another point. Without optical element, the rays just go in their own different directions and don't meet again. So there is no image.




      When you put a convex lens in front of the pen, why you can now see the image of the pen on the paper?




      Because a convex lens bends the rays so that the diverging rays originating from any given point on the pen—as long as it is further than the focal point—start to converge on the other side. The basic rules say that a ray passing through the centre of the lens passes straight and a ray passing parallel to the optical axis on one side passes through the focal point.



      These rules allow you to trace three different rays through the lens and where they intersect on the other side, there is the real image (which you can see iff it coincides with a piece of paper). You could trace the other rays too, but that requires more advanced analytical geometry.




      When then can you see the image of a torch when you shine it on the paper?




      I you are talking about a real torch—as in a stick with a piece of burning rag wound around one end—you won't. You'll only see a more brightly illuminated spot where the paper is closer to the torch.



      If you are talking about the electric kind, most of them are reflectors, that is they have a parabolic mirror mounted behind the light emitting element.



      The mirror should be mounted so that the light emitting element is closer to the mirror than the focal point, in which case there is no real image, but a virtual image behind the mirror. Virtual image can be seen directly if the light is not too bright to look directly into it.



      However sometimes the mirror is mounted too far from the light element—or can be positioned there in the variable focus lights—and then there is a real image ahead of the light you can project on a paper.







      share|cite|improve this answer












      share|cite|improve this answer



      share|cite|improve this answer










      answered Nov 27 '18 at 21:29









      Jan Hudec

      1,38211014




      1,38211014












      • Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:15






      • 2




        @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
        – Jan Hudec
        Nov 28 '18 at 15:01




















      • Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
        – alxchen
        Nov 28 '18 at 12:15






      • 2




        @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
        – Jan Hudec
        Nov 28 '18 at 15:01


















      Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
      – alxchen
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:15




      Can you elaborate a bit on why we can see the flashlight's light on a sheet of paper ? That part is eluding me.
      – alxchen
      Nov 28 '18 at 12:15




      2




      2




      @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
      – Jan Hudec
      Nov 28 '18 at 15:01






      @alxchen, for the same reason you see the paper, the pencil, or anything else that is not emitting its own light at all in the first place – due to ambient reflection. The object reflects light falling on it, scattered in all directions, so you don't see image of the source, just the object reflecting it. Near the light source the light is more intense, because it didn't yet get stretched over so much surface, so also the ambient reflection is stronger.
      – Jan Hudec
      Nov 28 '18 at 15:01













      2














      In a mirror light is highly likely to reflect only in one angle according to the "law of reflection" ( I have no idea of why that is though ). On a paper it is likely to also reflect in all other directions. Therefore, on the paper, the image of the pencil is drowned out from the light hitting it from all other points in the environment. The light from each point on the pen will hit each point on the paper, and thus contribute to diffuse the image of itself.



      With a lens, you will only be able to see the image of the pen on the paper, if the only light that hits the paper is coming through the lens, or at least other light is sufficiently dim. Also the lens must be at the correct distance so it will focus all light coming from one point on the pen to one point on the paper. The reason you see a picture in that case, is because for each point on the paper, there is only one point on the pen (or whatever else is out there) as seen from the point of the lens, that will hit each point on the paper. This means that all light reflected from that point on the paper is coming only from one point on the pen.



      A torch will send directed light, thus light from one point on the torch only hits one part of the paper. Since the light is a lot brighter than the light coming from the environment, the light that hits your eye, will come from only the one point on the torch, thus recreating the round circle of the torch.



      Here are som drawings to illustrate. Blue are the rays that hits the eye, while red misses the eye.



      Pen to paper: (light from one point is illuminating all parts of the paper)
      enter image description here



      Pen to mirror: (light from one point is reflected in only one direction for each incidence angle)
      enter image description here



      Pen through lens: (the lens bends the incoming light so that for a given distance ratio between the pen and paper, each point illuminates only one point on the paper)
      enter image description here



      Torch: (directional light illuminates only one point on the paper for each point on the torch)
      enter image description here






      share|cite|improve this answer























      • This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
        – wizzwizz4
        Dec 1 '18 at 8:53
















      2














      In a mirror light is highly likely to reflect only in one angle according to the "law of reflection" ( I have no idea of why that is though ). On a paper it is likely to also reflect in all other directions. Therefore, on the paper, the image of the pencil is drowned out from the light hitting it from all other points in the environment. The light from each point on the pen will hit each point on the paper, and thus contribute to diffuse the image of itself.



      With a lens, you will only be able to see the image of the pen on the paper, if the only light that hits the paper is coming through the lens, or at least other light is sufficiently dim. Also the lens must be at the correct distance so it will focus all light coming from one point on the pen to one point on the paper. The reason you see a picture in that case, is because for each point on the paper, there is only one point on the pen (or whatever else is out there) as seen from the point of the lens, that will hit each point on the paper. This means that all light reflected from that point on the paper is coming only from one point on the pen.



      A torch will send directed light, thus light from one point on the torch only hits one part of the paper. Since the light is a lot brighter than the light coming from the environment, the light that hits your eye, will come from only the one point on the torch, thus recreating the round circle of the torch.



      Here are som drawings to illustrate. Blue are the rays that hits the eye, while red misses the eye.



      Pen to paper: (light from one point is illuminating all parts of the paper)
      enter image description here



      Pen to mirror: (light from one point is reflected in only one direction for each incidence angle)
      enter image description here



      Pen through lens: (the lens bends the incoming light so that for a given distance ratio between the pen and paper, each point illuminates only one point on the paper)
      enter image description here



      Torch: (directional light illuminates only one point on the paper for each point on the torch)
      enter image description here






      share|cite|improve this answer























      • This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
        – wizzwizz4
        Dec 1 '18 at 8:53














      2












      2








      2






      In a mirror light is highly likely to reflect only in one angle according to the "law of reflection" ( I have no idea of why that is though ). On a paper it is likely to also reflect in all other directions. Therefore, on the paper, the image of the pencil is drowned out from the light hitting it from all other points in the environment. The light from each point on the pen will hit each point on the paper, and thus contribute to diffuse the image of itself.



      With a lens, you will only be able to see the image of the pen on the paper, if the only light that hits the paper is coming through the lens, or at least other light is sufficiently dim. Also the lens must be at the correct distance so it will focus all light coming from one point on the pen to one point on the paper. The reason you see a picture in that case, is because for each point on the paper, there is only one point on the pen (or whatever else is out there) as seen from the point of the lens, that will hit each point on the paper. This means that all light reflected from that point on the paper is coming only from one point on the pen.



      A torch will send directed light, thus light from one point on the torch only hits one part of the paper. Since the light is a lot brighter than the light coming from the environment, the light that hits your eye, will come from only the one point on the torch, thus recreating the round circle of the torch.



      Here are som drawings to illustrate. Blue are the rays that hits the eye, while red misses the eye.



      Pen to paper: (light from one point is illuminating all parts of the paper)
      enter image description here



      Pen to mirror: (light from one point is reflected in only one direction for each incidence angle)
      enter image description here



      Pen through lens: (the lens bends the incoming light so that for a given distance ratio between the pen and paper, each point illuminates only one point on the paper)
      enter image description here



      Torch: (directional light illuminates only one point on the paper for each point on the torch)
      enter image description here






      share|cite|improve this answer














      In a mirror light is highly likely to reflect only in one angle according to the "law of reflection" ( I have no idea of why that is though ). On a paper it is likely to also reflect in all other directions. Therefore, on the paper, the image of the pencil is drowned out from the light hitting it from all other points in the environment. The light from each point on the pen will hit each point on the paper, and thus contribute to diffuse the image of itself.



      With a lens, you will only be able to see the image of the pen on the paper, if the only light that hits the paper is coming through the lens, or at least other light is sufficiently dim. Also the lens must be at the correct distance so it will focus all light coming from one point on the pen to one point on the paper. The reason you see a picture in that case, is because for each point on the paper, there is only one point on the pen (or whatever else is out there) as seen from the point of the lens, that will hit each point on the paper. This means that all light reflected from that point on the paper is coming only from one point on the pen.



      A torch will send directed light, thus light from one point on the torch only hits one part of the paper. Since the light is a lot brighter than the light coming from the environment, the light that hits your eye, will come from only the one point on the torch, thus recreating the round circle of the torch.



      Here are som drawings to illustrate. Blue are the rays that hits the eye, while red misses the eye.



      Pen to paper: (light from one point is illuminating all parts of the paper)
      enter image description here



      Pen to mirror: (light from one point is reflected in only one direction for each incidence angle)
      enter image description here



      Pen through lens: (the lens bends the incoming light so that for a given distance ratio between the pen and paper, each point illuminates only one point on the paper)
      enter image description here



      Torch: (directional light illuminates only one point on the paper for each point on the torch)
      enter image description here







      share|cite|improve this answer














      share|cite|improve this answer



      share|cite|improve this answer








      edited Nov 29 '18 at 13:45

























      answered Nov 29 '18 at 12:57









      morten

      1292




      1292












      • This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
        – wizzwizz4
        Dec 1 '18 at 8:53


















      • This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
        – wizzwizz4
        Dec 1 '18 at 8:53
















      This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
      – wizzwizz4
      Dec 1 '18 at 8:53




      This answer is great! The pictures make sense.
      – wizzwizz4
      Dec 1 '18 at 8:53











      2














      There are several things going on that make a mirror and paper reflect light differently.



      First, if you examine the surface of the paper under a microscope you will see a very rough surface. This roughness has the effect of scattering the light. Imagine trying to play ping pong on a table covered with rocks of all sizes. The ping pong ball would bounce unpredictably. The mirror, in contrast, is very smooth to light and so light can bounce off in a predictable direction.



      Another difference is the electrical conductivity of the material. Light is electromagnetic and interacts with electrons, changing their motion. Most electrons are bound to particular atoms and so their range of motion is limited. Electrical conductors additionally have some electrons that can freely swim around among the atoms. This additional mobility is visible to us by causing metals to have their luster. The silver in the mirror is a great conductor of electricity, and the glass keeps the silver smooth and protects it from being tarnished by air. The combination results in an extremely smooth surface with maximum metallic luster.



      In contrast, the paper is exhibiting another phenomenon. Light can be absorbed and its energy re-emitted as a color that has more to do with the material than the source of the light. This can be seen by examining many things under black (ultraviolet) light. Some objects will seem very dark. Others will glow white or a particular color under UV light even though the black light bulb does not provide that wavelength of light. This is particularly true of artificial products and their packaging that are tuned to be attractive to people. For example, compare paper and styrofoam that are both white under ordinary lighting. Under UV light, the paper will typically glow bright white but the styrofoam will appear dark and dull. This happens because the paper absorbs invisible UV energy and becomes a source of visible light. Some of this happens under ordinary lighting too and contributes to the brightness of the paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer





















      • This. This is the correct answer.
        – rubenvb
        Dec 2 '18 at 11:56
















      2














      There are several things going on that make a mirror and paper reflect light differently.



      First, if you examine the surface of the paper under a microscope you will see a very rough surface. This roughness has the effect of scattering the light. Imagine trying to play ping pong on a table covered with rocks of all sizes. The ping pong ball would bounce unpredictably. The mirror, in contrast, is very smooth to light and so light can bounce off in a predictable direction.



      Another difference is the electrical conductivity of the material. Light is electromagnetic and interacts with electrons, changing their motion. Most electrons are bound to particular atoms and so their range of motion is limited. Electrical conductors additionally have some electrons that can freely swim around among the atoms. This additional mobility is visible to us by causing metals to have their luster. The silver in the mirror is a great conductor of electricity, and the glass keeps the silver smooth and protects it from being tarnished by air. The combination results in an extremely smooth surface with maximum metallic luster.



      In contrast, the paper is exhibiting another phenomenon. Light can be absorbed and its energy re-emitted as a color that has more to do with the material than the source of the light. This can be seen by examining many things under black (ultraviolet) light. Some objects will seem very dark. Others will glow white or a particular color under UV light even though the black light bulb does not provide that wavelength of light. This is particularly true of artificial products and their packaging that are tuned to be attractive to people. For example, compare paper and styrofoam that are both white under ordinary lighting. Under UV light, the paper will typically glow bright white but the styrofoam will appear dark and dull. This happens because the paper absorbs invisible UV energy and becomes a source of visible light. Some of this happens under ordinary lighting too and contributes to the brightness of the paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer





















      • This. This is the correct answer.
        – rubenvb
        Dec 2 '18 at 11:56














      2












      2








      2






      There are several things going on that make a mirror and paper reflect light differently.



      First, if you examine the surface of the paper under a microscope you will see a very rough surface. This roughness has the effect of scattering the light. Imagine trying to play ping pong on a table covered with rocks of all sizes. The ping pong ball would bounce unpredictably. The mirror, in contrast, is very smooth to light and so light can bounce off in a predictable direction.



      Another difference is the electrical conductivity of the material. Light is electromagnetic and interacts with electrons, changing their motion. Most electrons are bound to particular atoms and so their range of motion is limited. Electrical conductors additionally have some electrons that can freely swim around among the atoms. This additional mobility is visible to us by causing metals to have their luster. The silver in the mirror is a great conductor of electricity, and the glass keeps the silver smooth and protects it from being tarnished by air. The combination results in an extremely smooth surface with maximum metallic luster.



      In contrast, the paper is exhibiting another phenomenon. Light can be absorbed and its energy re-emitted as a color that has more to do with the material than the source of the light. This can be seen by examining many things under black (ultraviolet) light. Some objects will seem very dark. Others will glow white or a particular color under UV light even though the black light bulb does not provide that wavelength of light. This is particularly true of artificial products and their packaging that are tuned to be attractive to people. For example, compare paper and styrofoam that are both white under ordinary lighting. Under UV light, the paper will typically glow bright white but the styrofoam will appear dark and dull. This happens because the paper absorbs invisible UV energy and becomes a source of visible light. Some of this happens under ordinary lighting too and contributes to the brightness of the paper.






      share|cite|improve this answer












      There are several things going on that make a mirror and paper reflect light differently.



      First, if you examine the surface of the paper under a microscope you will see a very rough surface. This roughness has the effect of scattering the light. Imagine trying to play ping pong on a table covered with rocks of all sizes. The ping pong ball would bounce unpredictably. The mirror, in contrast, is very smooth to light and so light can bounce off in a predictable direction.



      Another difference is the electrical conductivity of the material. Light is electromagnetic and interacts with electrons, changing their motion. Most electrons are bound to particular atoms and so their range of motion is limited. Electrical conductors additionally have some electrons that can freely swim around among the atoms. This additional mobility is visible to us by causing metals to have their luster. The silver in the mirror is a great conductor of electricity, and the glass keeps the silver smooth and protects it from being tarnished by air. The combination results in an extremely smooth surface with maximum metallic luster.



      In contrast, the paper is exhibiting another phenomenon. Light can be absorbed and its energy re-emitted as a color that has more to do with the material than the source of the light. This can be seen by examining many things under black (ultraviolet) light. Some objects will seem very dark. Others will glow white or a particular color under UV light even though the black light bulb does not provide that wavelength of light. This is particularly true of artificial products and their packaging that are tuned to be attractive to people. For example, compare paper and styrofoam that are both white under ordinary lighting. Under UV light, the paper will typically glow bright white but the styrofoam will appear dark and dull. This happens because the paper absorbs invisible UV energy and becomes a source of visible light. Some of this happens under ordinary lighting too and contributes to the brightness of the paper.







      share|cite|improve this answer












      share|cite|improve this answer



      share|cite|improve this answer










      answered Dec 1 '18 at 1:13









      phr

      1563




      1563












      • This. This is the correct answer.
        – rubenvb
        Dec 2 '18 at 11:56


















      • This. This is the correct answer.
        – rubenvb
        Dec 2 '18 at 11:56
















      This. This is the correct answer.
      – rubenvb
      Dec 2 '18 at 11:56




      This. This is the correct answer.
      – rubenvb
      Dec 2 '18 at 11:56











      1














      The light scatters off the pen in all possible directions with similar intensity, so one point of the paper is illuminated with scattered light from all points of the pen and one gets a very blurry image. Better image can be got only if somehow the point on paper gets light only from some point or only a small area on the pen, such as when using a lens or a camera obscura: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura






      share|cite|improve this answer


























        1














        The light scatters off the pen in all possible directions with similar intensity, so one point of the paper is illuminated with scattered light from all points of the pen and one gets a very blurry image. Better image can be got only if somehow the point on paper gets light only from some point or only a small area on the pen, such as when using a lens or a camera obscura: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura






        share|cite|improve this answer
























          1












          1








          1






          The light scatters off the pen in all possible directions with similar intensity, so one point of the paper is illuminated with scattered light from all points of the pen and one gets a very blurry image. Better image can be got only if somehow the point on paper gets light only from some point or only a small area on the pen, such as when using a lens or a camera obscura: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura






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          The light scatters off the pen in all possible directions with similar intensity, so one point of the paper is illuminated with scattered light from all points of the pen and one gets a very blurry image. Better image can be got only if somehow the point on paper gets light only from some point or only a small area on the pen, such as when using a lens or a camera obscura: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura







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          answered Nov 27 '18 at 22:46









          Ján Lalinský

          14.3k1334




          14.3k1334























              0














              A reflective or polished surface respects and preserves the angular proximity of incoming beams on its points. The less the angular proximity of incoming intensity is preserved in the outgoing intensity profile, the more diffuse and "matte" looks the surface






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                0














                A reflective or polished surface respects and preserves the angular proximity of incoming beams on its points. The less the angular proximity of incoming intensity is preserved in the outgoing intensity profile, the more diffuse and "matte" looks the surface






                share|cite|improve this answer
























                  0












                  0








                  0






                  A reflective or polished surface respects and preserves the angular proximity of incoming beams on its points. The less the angular proximity of incoming intensity is preserved in the outgoing intensity profile, the more diffuse and "matte" looks the surface






                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  A reflective or polished surface respects and preserves the angular proximity of incoming beams on its points. The less the angular proximity of incoming intensity is preserved in the outgoing intensity profile, the more diffuse and "matte" looks the surface







                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 27 '18 at 23:01









                  lurscher

                  7,87422787




                  7,87422787























                      0














                      (I am the OP, and here's the explanation which I can make out from the answers. I am not sure if this correct or not even wrong, can someone point it out ?)



                      We see an object X when light from other sources reflect on X and reflects back to our eyes/the object X itself emants light. There are two factors which governs whether we can see an object's reflection on a screen (sheet/mirror etc)




                      1. The intensity of the light emanting from X

                      2. The reflection at the surface or the screen.


                      In the case of paper and the pen (1) is low, and scattered reflection in random direction for (2) makes it even lower, that's why the the reflection is barely visible.



                      In the case of paper and the flashlight, while (2) is same, (1) is pretty high so we can see the flashlight in the screen. For a laser, (2) is even more intense, that's why even a small beam of laser can be seen clearly from all direction (the scattered reflection in (1) makes seeing uniformly from all directions possible).



                      In the case of paper and the pen with a convex lens, while (2) and (1) are both same, the convex lens focuses every ray emanting from the pen to a single point in the screen (well this is an approximation but roughly OK), which makes the intensity very high. Now the thing is same as the that of the pepper and the laser light.






                      share|cite|improve this answer





















                      • I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:43










                      • With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:08










                      • As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:16


















                      0














                      (I am the OP, and here's the explanation which I can make out from the answers. I am not sure if this correct or not even wrong, can someone point it out ?)



                      We see an object X when light from other sources reflect on X and reflects back to our eyes/the object X itself emants light. There are two factors which governs whether we can see an object's reflection on a screen (sheet/mirror etc)




                      1. The intensity of the light emanting from X

                      2. The reflection at the surface or the screen.


                      In the case of paper and the pen (1) is low, and scattered reflection in random direction for (2) makes it even lower, that's why the the reflection is barely visible.



                      In the case of paper and the flashlight, while (2) is same, (1) is pretty high so we can see the flashlight in the screen. For a laser, (2) is even more intense, that's why even a small beam of laser can be seen clearly from all direction (the scattered reflection in (1) makes seeing uniformly from all directions possible).



                      In the case of paper and the pen with a convex lens, while (2) and (1) are both same, the convex lens focuses every ray emanting from the pen to a single point in the screen (well this is an approximation but roughly OK), which makes the intensity very high. Now the thing is same as the that of the pepper and the laser light.






                      share|cite|improve this answer





















                      • I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:43










                      • With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:08










                      • As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:16
















                      0












                      0








                      0






                      (I am the OP, and here's the explanation which I can make out from the answers. I am not sure if this correct or not even wrong, can someone point it out ?)



                      We see an object X when light from other sources reflect on X and reflects back to our eyes/the object X itself emants light. There are two factors which governs whether we can see an object's reflection on a screen (sheet/mirror etc)




                      1. The intensity of the light emanting from X

                      2. The reflection at the surface or the screen.


                      In the case of paper and the pen (1) is low, and scattered reflection in random direction for (2) makes it even lower, that's why the the reflection is barely visible.



                      In the case of paper and the flashlight, while (2) is same, (1) is pretty high so we can see the flashlight in the screen. For a laser, (2) is even more intense, that's why even a small beam of laser can be seen clearly from all direction (the scattered reflection in (1) makes seeing uniformly from all directions possible).



                      In the case of paper and the pen with a convex lens, while (2) and (1) are both same, the convex lens focuses every ray emanting from the pen to a single point in the screen (well this is an approximation but roughly OK), which makes the intensity very high. Now the thing is same as the that of the pepper and the laser light.






                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      (I am the OP, and here's the explanation which I can make out from the answers. I am not sure if this correct or not even wrong, can someone point it out ?)



                      We see an object X when light from other sources reflect on X and reflects back to our eyes/the object X itself emants light. There are two factors which governs whether we can see an object's reflection on a screen (sheet/mirror etc)




                      1. The intensity of the light emanting from X

                      2. The reflection at the surface or the screen.


                      In the case of paper and the pen (1) is low, and scattered reflection in random direction for (2) makes it even lower, that's why the the reflection is barely visible.



                      In the case of paper and the flashlight, while (2) is same, (1) is pretty high so we can see the flashlight in the screen. For a laser, (2) is even more intense, that's why even a small beam of laser can be seen clearly from all direction (the scattered reflection in (1) makes seeing uniformly from all directions possible).



                      In the case of paper and the pen with a convex lens, while (2) and (1) are both same, the convex lens focuses every ray emanting from the pen to a single point in the screen (well this is an approximation but roughly OK), which makes the intensity very high. Now the thing is same as the that of the pepper and the laser light.







                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 30 '18 at 15:31









                      alxchen

                      5771310




                      5771310












                      • I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:43










                      • With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:08










                      • As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:16




















                      • I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:43










                      • With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:08










                      • As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 8:16


















                      I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 7:43




                      I would say the factors are: 1. directionality, 2. Intensity, 3. surface reflection properties.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 7:43












                      With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 8:08




                      With a laser, it's not the intensity that is the deciding factor, but the directionality of the light emanating from it. Same with the torch. A very intense, but non-directional light will not reflect on a surface that only scatters light. All surfaces does scatter to one degree and reflect to another degree, though, so take that in to account.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 8:08












                      As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 8:16






                      As for the pen that is close to the paper, and seems to reflect somewhat, this is because the light from one point on the pen will now disproportionately hit the closer parts of the paper, creating a higher intensity area of illumination.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 8:16













                      0














                      I can't believe how much nonsense has been posted here and how many up-votes have been awarded to answers that are nonsense. We are told that it's because the pen isn't polished like a mirror rather than because the paper isn't polished like a mirror. That fails to explain why you can see a reflection of the same pen in a mirror.



                      Light falling on a mirror is reflected in such a direction that the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. Light falling on a white sheet of paper is reflected but scattered, going in all directions from the point where it hits the paper.






                      share|cite|improve this answer





















                      • I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:57
















                      0














                      I can't believe how much nonsense has been posted here and how many up-votes have been awarded to answers that are nonsense. We are told that it's because the pen isn't polished like a mirror rather than because the paper isn't polished like a mirror. That fails to explain why you can see a reflection of the same pen in a mirror.



                      Light falling on a mirror is reflected in such a direction that the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. Light falling on a white sheet of paper is reflected but scattered, going in all directions from the point where it hits the paper.






                      share|cite|improve this answer





















                      • I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:57














                      0












                      0








                      0






                      I can't believe how much nonsense has been posted here and how many up-votes have been awarded to answers that are nonsense. We are told that it's because the pen isn't polished like a mirror rather than because the paper isn't polished like a mirror. That fails to explain why you can see a reflection of the same pen in a mirror.



                      Light falling on a mirror is reflected in such a direction that the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. Light falling on a white sheet of paper is reflected but scattered, going in all directions from the point where it hits the paper.






                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      I can't believe how much nonsense has been posted here and how many up-votes have been awarded to answers that are nonsense. We are told that it's because the pen isn't polished like a mirror rather than because the paper isn't polished like a mirror. That fails to explain why you can see a reflection of the same pen in a mirror.



                      Light falling on a mirror is reflected in such a direction that the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. Light falling on a white sheet of paper is reflected but scattered, going in all directions from the point where it hits the paper.







                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer










                      answered Dec 1 '18 at 20:41









                      Michael Hardy

                      263110




                      263110












                      • I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:57


















                      • I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                        – morten
                        Dec 3 '18 at 7:57
















                      I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 7:57




                      I believe my answer does not reflect your criticism.
                      – morten
                      Dec 3 '18 at 7:57





                      protected by AccidentalFourierTransform Dec 1 '18 at 1:25



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