math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_image_in_2_parallel_mirrors

Preview meta tags from the math.answers.com website.

Linked Hostnames

8

Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance

Google

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_image_in_2_parallel_mirrors

How many image in 2 parallel mirrors? - Answers

It's not infinite, it's finite, because the speed of light is finite. Actually, when you look at one of these mirrors, the number of images will increase continuously at the velocity "c", so you can accept that its limit is infinite, but in other hand it's finite because the speed of light "c" is finite, it's a physical "optical" paradox.



Bing

How many image in 2 parallel mirrors? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_image_in_2_parallel_mirrors

It's not infinite, it's finite, because the speed of light is finite. Actually, when you look at one of these mirrors, the number of images will increase continuously at the velocity "c", so you can accept that its limit is infinite, but in other hand it's finite because the speed of light "c" is finite, it's a physical "optical" paradox.



DuckDuckGo

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_image_in_2_parallel_mirrors

How many image in 2 parallel mirrors? - Answers

It's not infinite, it's finite, because the speed of light is finite. Actually, when you look at one of these mirrors, the number of images will increase continuously at the velocity "c", so you can accept that its limit is infinite, but in other hand it's finite because the speed of light "c" is finite, it's a physical "optical" paradox.

  • General Meta Tags

    22
    • title
      How many image in 2 parallel mirrors? - Answers
    • charset
      utf-8
    • Content-Type
      text/html; charset=utf-8
    • viewport
      minimum-scale=1, initial-scale=1, width=device-width, shrink-to-fit=no
    • X-UA-Compatible
      IE=edge,chrome=1
  • Open Graph Meta Tags

    7
    • og:image
      https://st.answers.com/html_test_assets/Answers_Blue.jpeg
    • og:image:width
      900
    • og:image:height
      900
    • og:site_name
      Answers
    • og:description
      It's not infinite, it's finite, because the speed of light is finite. Actually, when you look at one of these mirrors, the number of images will increase continuously at the velocity "c", so you can accept that its limit is infinite, but in other hand it's finite because the speed of light "c" is finite, it's a physical "optical" paradox.
  • Twitter Meta Tags

    1
    • twitter:card
      summary_large_image
  • Link Tags

    16
    • alternate
      https://www.answers.com/feed.rss
    • apple-touch-icon
      /icons/180x180.png
    • canonical
      https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_image_in_2_parallel_mirrors
    • icon
      /favicon.svg
    • icon
      /icons/16x16.png

Links

58