parabolic mirror
Noun: A parabolic mirror is a concave mirror whose surface is shaped like a paraboloid (a three-dimensional parabola). This specific shape has the geometric property of reflecting and focusing parallel incoming rays of light (or other electromagnetic radiation) to a single point called the focus. Conversely, it can also take a point source of light at its focus and reflect it into a parallel beam.
The term is used to describe a specific optical component in scientific, industrial, and everyday devices. It is a technical noun phrase.
Examples: * The telescope uses a large parabolic mirror to collect light from distant stars. * In a car's headlight, a parabolic mirror behind the bulb helps create a strong, directed beam. * The efficiency of the solar cooker depends on the precision of its parabolic mirror.
- Astronomical Context: In reflecting telescopes (like the Hubble Space Telescope), the primary mirror is often a parabolic mirror to eliminate spherical aberration and produce sharp images.
- Communication Technology: Satellite dishes are a form of parabolic mirror designed to reflect and focus radio waves onto a receiver.
- Parabolic Reflector: A more general term that can refer to devices designed for focusing not just light but also sound (e.g., in microphones) or radio waves. A parabolic mirror is a type of parabolic reflector specifically for light.
- Concave Mirror: A broader category of mirrors that curve inward. A parabolic mirror is a specific type of concave mirror with a parabolic, not spherical, curve.
- Paraboloid: The three-dimensional geometric shape that defines the surface of a parabolic mirror.
- Paraboloidal mirror (a more technically precise synonym).
- Parabolic reflector (when the context clearly involves light).
- Focus (Focal Point): The fixed point where a parabolic mirror converges parallel incoming light.
- Optical Axis: The line through the center of the mirror's curvature and its focus.
- Collimation: The process of making light rays parallel. A parabolic mirror can collimate light from a source at its focus.
- a parabolic reflector for light radiation