Light Reflection is one of the most important parts of Class 10 Physics because it combines theory, ray diagrams, mirror formulas, image formation, and numerical application in one chapter. It is also one of the most scoring sections in board exams when students understand the standard cases properly and learn how to write answers in a stepwise format.
Many students feel comfortable with definitions like reflection, mirror, focus, pole, and principal axis, but they lose marks in 5-mark questions because they panic in ray diagrams, forget image properties, or make sign errors in numericals. The good part is that these mistakes are very fixable. Once students revise the important mirror cases properly and practise a few standard board-style questions, this topic becomes much easier.
At Deeksha Vedantu, we always encourage students to study Light Reflection with a visual approach first. If the mirror, object position, reflected rays, and image position are clear in the mind, then even long-answer questions become manageable.
Why Light Reflection Is Important in Class 10
This topic is important because it appears in direct theory questions, numerical questions, ray-diagram questions, and application-based questions.
Why Students Should Prepare This Topic Well
| Reason | Why it matters |
| Board relevance | Reflection and mirrors are asked repeatedly in CBSE-style papers |
| High scoring potential | Standard ray-diagram and numerical patterns can fetch full marks |
| Strong concept value | Builds the base for image formation and optical devices |
| Mixed question pattern | Can appear as theory, numerical, diagram, or MCQ |
| Repeated mirror cases | The same concepts are asked in different forms every year |
Chapter Overview at a Glance
Before solving important questions, students should revise the full reflection framework quickly.
Quick Concept Table
| Topic | Main idea |
| Reflection of light | Bouncing back of light from a surface |
| Concave mirror | Curved mirror with reflecting surface on the inner side |
| Convex mirror | Curved mirror with reflecting surface on the outer side |
| Pole | Geometric centre of the mirror |
| Principal axis | Straight line passing through pole and centre of curvature |
| Principal focus | Point where parallel rays meet or appear to meet after reflection |
| Radius of curvature | Distance between pole and centre of curvature |
| Focal length | Distance between pole and principal focus |
| Mirror formula | 1/f = 1/v + 1/u |
| Magnification | m = -v/u = hᵢ/hₒ |
Basic Terms Students Must Know
Strong answers begin with strong basic vocabulary.
Mirror Terms Table
| Term | Meaning |
| Pole (P) | Centre point of the reflecting surface |
| Centre of curvature (C) | Centre of the sphere of which the mirror is a part |
| Radius of curvature (R) | Distance between pole and centre of curvature |
| Principal focus (F) | Point where reflected rays meet or appear to meet |
| Focal length (f) | Distance between pole and focus |
| Aperture | Effective diameter of the reflecting surface |
Important Relation Between Focal Length and Radius of Curvature
This is one of the most important formula-based concepts from this topic.
Formula Table
| Quantity | Formula |
| Radius of curvature and focal length relation | R = 2f |
| Focal length from radius | f = R/2 |
Students should remember this relation very clearly because it appears often in direct board questions.
Laws of Reflection
The laws of reflection form the conceptual base of this topic.
Laws of Reflection Table
| Law | Statement |
| First law | The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection |
| Second law | The incident ray, reflected ray, and normal at the point of incidence all lie in the same plane |
These laws are more commonly used in the plane mirror part, but they remain the conceptual foundation for reflection from curved mirrors as well.
Concave Mirror and Convex Mirror: Core Difference
Students should not mix these two mirrors because their image formation and applications are different.
Concave vs Convex Mirror Table
| Mirror type | Reflecting surface | Nature of reflected rays | General image behaviour |
| Concave mirror | Inner side | Rays can converge | Can form real or virtual image depending on object position |
| Convex mirror | Outer side | Rays diverge | Always forms virtual, erect, and diminished image |
Applications of Concave and Convex Mirrors
This is a frequently asked board area.
Application Table
| Mirror | Common applications |
| Concave mirror | Solar furnace, shaving mirror, dentist mirror, reflector in torches and headlights |
| Convex mirror | Rear-view mirrors in vehicles, security mirrors in shops and roads |
Important Image Formation Cases in Concave Mirror
This is one of the most important board-preparation sections.
Concave Mirror Image Formation Table
| Object position | Image position | Nature of image | Size of image |
| At infinity | At focus | Real and inverted | Highly diminished, point-sized |
| Beyond C | Between C and F | Real and inverted | Diminished |
| At C | At C | Real and inverted | Same size |
| Between C and F | Beyond C | Real and inverted | Enlarged |
| At F | At infinity | Real and inverted | Highly enlarged |
| Between P and F | Behind the mirror | Virtual and erect | Enlarged |
Students must memorise the sixth case very carefully because it is the only case in which a concave mirror forms a virtual and erect image.
Important Image Formation Case in Convex Mirror
Convex Mirror Image Formation Table
| Object position | Image position | Nature of image | Size of image |
| Anywhere in front of the mirror | Between P and F behind the mirror | Virtual and erect | Diminished |
This is why convex mirrors are used as rear-view mirrors in vehicles.
Sign Convention for Spherical Mirrors
Many students lose marks in numericals because of sign mistakes.
Sign Convention Table
| Quantity | Rule |
| Distances measured in the direction of incident light | Positive |
| Distances measured opposite to the direction of incident light | Negative |
| Height measured upward from principal axis | Positive |
| Height measured downward from principal axis | Negative |
Quick Mirror Sign Guide
| Mirror situation | Sign idea |
| Object distance u for real object in front of mirror | Negative |
| Focal length of concave mirror | Negative |
| Focal length of convex mirror | Positive |
| Real image distance v in front of mirror | Negative |
| Virtual image distance v behind the mirror | Positive |
Important Question 1: Sunlight, Concave Mirror, and Bright Spot
This is a very important board-style concept question.
A student holds a concave mirror in hand and directs its reflecting surface toward the Sun. The reflected light is focused on a white cardboard, and a bright sharp spot is obtained.
What Is Happening in This Situation
| Observation | Explanation |
| Light from the Sun falls on the mirror as parallel rays | The Sun is very far away, so the rays can be treated as parallel |
| The reflected rays meet at one bright point | A concave mirror converges parallel rays at the principal focus |
| The bright sharp spot is formed on the cardboard | That point is the image of the Sun and lies at the principal focus |
Why This Question Is Important
| Tested idea | What the student should know |
| Nature of incident rays from the Sun | Parallel rays |
| Behaviour of concave mirror | Converges parallel rays |
| Position of image | Principal focus |
Important Question 2: State Two Applications of a Concave Mirror
This is a direct theory question often linked with long-answer formats.
Answer Table
| Application | Why concave mirror is useful |
| Solar furnace | It can concentrate sunlight at the focus |
| Shaving mirror or dentist mirror | It forms a magnified image when the object is between pole and focus |
| Torch or headlight reflector | It helps produce a strong parallel beam when the source is near the focus |
Answer
Two applications of a concave mirror are:
- it is used in solar furnaces to concentrate sunlight
- it is used as a shaving mirror or dentist mirror to obtain a magnified image
Important Question 3: Radius of Curvature from Focal Length
If the distance between the mirror and the principal focus is 15 cm, find the radius of curvature.
Given
| Quantity | Value |
| Focal length, f | 15 cm |
Step 1
Use the relation:
R = 2f
Step 2
Substitute the value:
R = 2 × 15 = 30 cm
Answer
The radius of curvature of the mirror is 30 cm.
Important Question 4: Ray Diagram When Object Is Between Pole and Focus
Draw the ray diagram when an object is placed between the pole and principal focus of a concave mirror. State the nature of image formed.
What Students Must Remember
| Point | Explanation |
| Mirror used | Concave mirror |
| Object position | Between P and F |
| Important result | This is the exception case for concave mirror |
Nature of Image in This Case
| Property | Image nature |
| Position | Behind the mirror |
| Nature | Virtual and erect |
| Size | Enlarged |
How the Ray Diagram Is Drawn
| Step | What to do |
| Step 1 | Draw a concave mirror with pole P, focus F, and centre of curvature C |
| Step 2 | Place the object between P and F |
| Step 3 | Draw one ray parallel to the principal axis and reflect it through the focus |
| Step 4 | Draw another ray directed toward the pole and reflect it obeying the law of reflection, or draw a ray toward the centre of curvature and reflect it back along the same path |
| Step 5 | Extend the reflected rays backward behind the mirror |
| Step 6 | The backward extensions meet behind the mirror, giving a virtual, erect, and enlarged image |
Answer
When the object is placed between the pole and principal focus of a concave mirror, the image formed is virtual, erect, and enlarged, and it is formed behind the mirror.
Important Question 5: Object at Centre of Curvature Numerical
An object of height 10 cm is placed at a distance of 100 cm in front of a concave mirror. If its image is formed at the same point where the object is placed, find:
- the focal length of the mirror
- the magnification of the image
Given
| Quantity | Value |
| Object height, hₒ | 10 cm |
| Object distance, u | -100 cm |
| Image distance, v | -100 cm |
Part A: Find the Focal Length
Step 1
If the image is formed at the same point as the object, the object is at the centre of curvature.
So:
R = 100 cm
Step 2
Use the relation:
f = R/2
Step 3
Substitute the value:
f = 100/2 = 50 cm
For a concave mirror, focal length is taken as negative in strict sign convention, so f = -50 cm. In value form, the focal length is 50 cm.
Answer
The focal length of the concave mirror is 50 cm.
Part B: Find the Magnification
Step 1
Use the formula:
m = -v/u
Step 2
Substitute the values:
m = -(-100)/(-100)
m = -1
Answer
The magnification is -1.
Interpretation of Magnification
| Magnification value | Meaning |
| Negative sign | Image is inverted |
| Magnitude 1 | Image is of the same size as the object |
So the image is real, inverted, and of the same size as the object.
Important Question 6: Which Mirror Is Used in Solar Furnace and Rear-View Mirror
This is a very common application-based MCQ or short-answer question.
Answer Table
| Device or use | Mirror used | Reason |
| Solar furnace | Concave mirror | It converges sunlight and concentrates it at the focus |
| Rear-view mirror in vehicles | Convex mirror | It gives a wider field of view and forms virtual, erect, diminished images |
Answer
- A concave mirror is used to focus sunlight in a solar furnace.
- A convex mirror is used as a rear-view mirror in vehicles.
Important 5-Mark Board Pattern from Light Reflection
Many board questions combine theory, formula, and image formation in one long answer.
Common 5-Mark Pattern Table
| Part of question | What is often asked |
| Concept part | Explain what happens with sunlight in a concave mirror |
| Formula part | Find focal length or radius of curvature |
| Ray-diagram part | Draw image formation case for a concave mirror |
| Numerical part | Use magnification or mirror relation |
| Application part | State uses of concave or convex mirror |
Students should practise this mixed structure because 5-mark questions often combine multiple sub-parts from the same concept area.
Important Formula Sheet for Quick Revision
This is the most useful last-minute formula section for students.
Formula Table
| Formula | Use |
| R = 2f | Relation between radius and focal length |
| f = R/2 | Find focal length from radius |
| 1/f = 1/v + 1/u | Mirror formula |
| m = -v/u | Magnification using distances |
| m = hᵢ/hₒ | Magnification using heights |
How to Write 5-Mark Reflection Answers Properly
Students often know the concept but still lose marks because the answer is not structured well.
Best Answer-Writing Strategy Table
| Step | What to do |
| Step 1 | Read all parts of the question carefully |
| Step 2 | Write the formula before substitution |
| Step 3 | Use correct sign convention |
| Step 4 | Draw ray diagrams neatly with scale if possible |
| Step 5 | Write image properties clearly in words |
| Step 6 | Write the final answer with correct unit or interpretation |
Common Mistakes Students Make in Light Reflection Questions
These mistakes are very common in board exams.
Common Mistakes Table
| Mistake | Correct idea |
| Forgetting that sunlight reaches as parallel rays | For very distant objects like the Sun, rays are treated as parallel |
| Mixing radius of curvature with focal length | R = 2f, so radius is always twice the focal length |
| Forgetting the exception case of concave mirror | Between pole and focus, image is virtual, erect, and enlarged |
| Sign errors in u, v, and f | Use the mirror sign convention carefully |
| Writing magnification without interpretation | Also explain whether image is inverted, enlarged, or same size |
| Confusing concave and convex mirror applications | Learn standard device-based applications clearly |
Quick Revision Table for Image Cases
This section helps in one-glance board revision.
Concave Mirror Quick Revision Table
| Object position | Image nature |
| At infinity | Real, inverted, highly diminished |
| Beyond C | Real, inverted, diminished |
| At C | Real, inverted, same size |
| Between C and F | Real, inverted, enlarged |
| At F | Real, inverted, highly enlarged |
| Between P and F | Virtual, erect, enlarged |
Convex Mirror Quick Revision Table
| Object position | Image nature |
| Anywhere in front of mirror | Virtual, erect, diminished |
Practice Questions for Students
Students should solve these to improve board readiness.
Important Practice Set
- State two applications of a concave mirror.
- Why is a convex mirror used as a rear-view mirror in vehicles?
- The focal length of a concave mirror is 20 cm. Find its radius of curvature.
- Draw the ray diagram when an object is placed between the pole and focus of a concave mirror.
- An object is placed at the centre of curvature of a concave mirror. State the position, nature, and size of image formed.
- A concave mirror forms the image of the Sun on a sheet of paper. What does this show about the position of the image?
- An object is placed 60 cm in front of a concave mirror of focal length 30 cm. Find magnification if the image is formed at the centre of curvature.
- Which mirror is used in solar furnace and which mirror is used in rear-view mirrors? Give reasons.
FAQs
Q1. Why is a concave mirror used to focus sunlight?
A concave mirror converges parallel rays of sunlight at its principal focus, so it can concentrate solar energy.
Q2. What is the relation between radius of curvature and focal length?
The relation is R = 2f.
Q3. What happens when an object is placed between the pole and focus of a concave mirror?
A concave mirror forms a virtual, erect, and enlarged image behind the mirror in this case.
Q4. Why is a convex mirror used as a rear-view mirror?
A convex mirror gives a wider field of view and forms a virtual, erect, and diminished image, which helps the driver see more area behind the vehicle.
Q5. What is the magnification when the object is at the centre of curvature of a concave mirror?
The magnification is -1, which means the image is inverted and of the same size as the object.
Q6. What does the bright spot formed by sunlight on a cardboard in front of a concave mirror represent?
It represents the image of the Sun formed at the principal focus of the mirror.
Q7. Which is the exception in concave mirror image formation?
The exception case is when the object is placed between the pole and focus. In that case the image is virtual and erect, unlike the other real and inverted cases.
Q8. How can I score full marks in reflection-based 5-mark questions?
Revise mirror cases, remember R = 2f, practise neat ray diagrams, use correct sign convention, and write image properties clearly.
Conclusion
Light Reflection is one of the most scoring parts of Class 10 Physics when students prepare it through diagrams, formulas, and repeated board-style questions. The topic may look confusing at first because of different image cases and mirror rules, but once the standard patterns are revised properly, it becomes highly manageable.
The smartest way to prepare this topic is to revise the mirror cases again and again, learn applications of concave and convex mirrors clearly, and practise important 5-mark questions in a stepwise format. At Deeksha Vedantu, we always remind students that in reflection, strong visual understanding leads to strong written answers.







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