Jay Johengen
Altamahaw-Ossipee, North Carolina, United States
<g> No, but I see now why you might think so. It's just something that I've wondered about and thought some of the geeky physics types here might have an idea. I think the first time I wondered was when I read about how artists back in history used mirrors to reflect images onto their canvas.
>i think that the binoculars should work as normal as you are reflecting in a straight line. however if you are looking into the mirror that is turned at 45 degrees then i don't think that it would. although the only use i can see for this is that you want to spy on people without them seeing you in the window:) do you live accross from a girls college dorm by any chance?
>~M
>
>>Looking through binoculars into a mirror that is angled to view out a window, will I be able to focus on objects far away the same way I would without the mirror? Or does the surface of the mirror itself become a variable?
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