<p>i put he can see I(shoulders), II (waist), III(knees) </p>
<p>and he’ll see more of his body as he moves back…</p>
<p>confirm?</p>
<p>i put he can see I(shoulders), II (waist), III(knees) </p>
<p>and he’ll see more of his body as he moves back…</p>
<p>confirm?</p>
<p>Is anyone working on a consolidated list?</p>
<p>wait I tried drawing the ray diagram from the knees</p>
<p>because the ray from the knees is coming from so far away, the angle of incidence is pretty big (like at least 45)
then the angle of reflection will be just as big and will shoot past his head
but if we extend it past the mirror, it’ll extend to a place where there is no mirror</p>
<p>unless we can see it if it touches the lower boundary of the mirror</p>
<p>like</p>
<p>mirror on the left</p>
<p>l
l
l…
l…
l…_______</p>
<p>the diagonal being the extended reflected ray</p>
<p>the correct answer are he sees his whole body (shoulders waist and knees) and as the mirror moves far away , he doesnt observe more or less of himself . Im 100% sure .</p>
<p>can you increase current by adding more resistors?</p>
<p>if you add more resistors in parallel, the equivalent resistance decreases. Thus, the current increases…</p>
<p>Was that a question on the test?</p>
<p>^ yeah, I think I remember picking some answer about putting resistors in parallel…</p>