REAL IMAGES AND
HOLOGRAMS
Each Mirage® you display is a scientific phenomenon
called a three-dimensional real image. For decades,
students often first heard of them in science labs, but
very few actually saw one. The most popular
demonstration, when available, was a single parabolic
mirror setup that looked something like this:
To reveal only the image and not the object - and to
conceal the fact that you were looking into a mirror - a
box was necessary to hide the object and its
illumination. Primitive, yet impressive, this Mirage®
could be viewed from only one direction.
Today, many educators and scientists are using
Mirage® to demonstrate real images. A precision optical
instrument, Mirage® has the advantage of functioning in
ambient light, can be viewed from 360 degrees, and is
certainly more attractive than a big, ugly box.
A startling surprise for the senses. Indeed,
Mirage® is capable of fooling anyone. Even with nothing
in it, people are amazed when they touch the mirrored
circle...their fingers go right through it. And when you
place an object inside, nothing about the appearance of
Mirage® will suggest that the object is not actually
resting where they see it, before their eyes - until
grasping and groping fingers prove there's nothing there
but thin air!
You'll also notice that objects which are reversed in
a single mirror are reversed back again in your Mirage®,
so that the illusion is "right reading," virtually
identical to the original. Achieving this breakthrough
in three-dimensional real imagery requires critical
manufacturing tolerances. The basic principal, however,
is simple.
VIRTUAL IMAGES VS. REAL IMAGES
More or less than meets the eye. Two types of
images exist in nature: real and virtual. A real image
is one in which light rays actually come from the image.
In a virtual image, they appear to come from the
reflected image - but do not. In a flat mirror, for
example, the virtual image of an object is behind, or
"inside" the mirror, but light rays do not emanate form
there. Real images form outside the system, where
emerging light rays cross and are "caught"...inside
camera...on a screen...or in a Mirage®. All concave
mirrors can produce real images under certain
circumstances. Conditions must be rigidly maintained,
however, or the illusion fails to appear. Observe the
path of light rays, below, as they construct a
three-dimensional image of a marble:
MODERN HOLOGRAPHY
Not too long ago, a new and exciting technology
called holography began to capture public attention.
Depth-defying images produced in common holography are
created by laser photography. However, Mirage®'s 3-D
illusions are not holograms formed by lasers. In an
evolving science, Mirage®'s full-color effect is called
a reflective hologram...a contemporary term for "any
object which can reproduce the image of an object in
full three-dimensional reality."
Our concept of reality is not hereditary. The
illusions you create with your Mirage®...on a desktop,
on a table, or in your hands...literally contradict a
lifetime of experiences. Never has the line between
sensory perception and reality been exposed with such
startling clarity.
DIRECTIONS FOR USING Mirage®
Place any small object or objects in the lower
mirror, taking care to center them. Use your
imagination, almost any small object works well: a ring,
strawberry, sugar cube, butterfly, marbles, coins, nuts
and bolts, jelly beans, buttons, flowers, vitamins - you
name it. Set the upper mirror on top. Instantly, the
objects appear floating above the mirrored circle, in
life like color and solid appearance. Shine a light on
them. Look at them from all sides. But reach to touch
them, and your fingers go right through. There's nothing
there but thin air! Again and again, people will refuse
to believe that they can't touch what they see before
them. You've created a Mirage® that defies, yet demands,
explanation. Read on to solve the secrets of Mirage®.
COMMENTS BY EDUCATORS
"I use the Mirage® primarily as a 'Gee-Whiz'
demonstration in optics lab, but I have found that it
helps students to understand the differences between
real and virtual images. An engineering professor who
teaches a World Cultures class remarked that he would
have liked to have had the Mirage® in class that day. It
would have been a perfect example of the fact that not
everything is exactly what it appears to be."
- Sandra Dawes, Lab Supervisor, University of
Evansville, IN
"The hovering image of a coin that can't be grasped
creates fertile ground for a discussion about mirrors
and real images. If for no other reason, my students
listen to my lectures about optics just to understand
how they were tricked by your device. We also use
Mirage® as an attention getter at open houses."
- Wayne K. Meshejian, Assistant Professor of Physics,
Longwood College, VA
"I have not figured out a way that is more dynamic in
moving students to examine phenomena beyond the surface
appearance. That poem or story is not just what we see
at first glance. The Mirage® forces each participant to
take that second and third 'look.' Of course, I cannot
resist mentioning Alice Through the Looking Glass."
- Professor Raymond L. Moore, Ph.D., Virginia
Intermont College
OTHER COMMENTS
"We've had such fun with your product. We've used it
in the jewelry section with jade turtles, in the
mineralogy section with mineral specimens, and whenever
we want to stop traffic and start conversations."
- Carol Smith, Shop Mgr., Glenbow Museum, Calgary,
Alberta Canada
Reuters News Agency reported from Washington that
president George Bush purchased a Mirage® from Al's
Magic Shop (located just three blocks from the White
House.) Al Cohen, shop owner, said "I believe he gave it
to President Reagan."