| 1. | 2. | ||
| 3. | 4. |
| Assertion (A): | Spherical aberration is absent in plane mirrors. |
| Reason (R): | Plane mirrors form exact life-size virtual images; and since these aren't spheres, they do not suffer from this type of aberration. |
| 1. | Both (A) and (R) are True and (R) is the correct explanation of (A). |
| 2. | Both (A) and (R) are True but (R) is not the correct explanation of (A). |
| 3. | (A) is True but (R) is False. |
| 4. | (A) is False but (R) is True. |
| Statement I: | The speed of light does not change after it is reflected from a mirror. |
| Statement II: | The speed of light depends on the medium in which light is propagating. |
| 1. | Statement I is incorrect and Statement II is correct. |
| 2. | Both Statement I and Statement II are correct. |
| 3. | Both Statement I and Statement II are incorrect. |
| 4. | Statement I is correct and Statement II is incorrect. |
A point source of light \(S\), placed at a distance \(60\) cm in front of the centre of a plane mirror of width \(50\) cm, hangs vertically on a wall. A man walks in front of the mirror along a line parallel to the mirror at a distance \(1.2\) m from it (see in the figure). The distance between the extreme points where he can see the image of the light source in the mirror is:
1. \(150\) cm
2. \(300\) cm
3. \(450\) cm
4. \(600\) cm