Rectilinear propagation, shadows and eclipses, the pinhole camera, laws of reflection, properties of images in a plane mirror, and the periscope.
Light travels in straight lines through a uniform medium. This is called rectilinear propagation and is demonstrated by the fact that an opaque object placed in the path of light casts a sharp shadow.
When an opaque object blocks a point source of light, a single dark shadow called an umbra forms, a region that receives no light.
When the source is extended (not a point), two shadow regions form:

The same geometry explains solar and lunar eclipses:
Solar eclipse: The Moon moves between the Sun and the Earth. In the umbra of the Moon's shadow, a total solar eclipse is observed. In the penumbra, a partial eclipse occurs.
Lunar eclipse: The Earth moves between the Sun and the Moon. The Moon enters Earth's shadow and appears dark.
A pinhole camera is a box with a tiny hole in one face and a translucent screen on the opposite face. Light from each point of the object passes through the hole in a straight line and forms an inverted image on the screen.

Properties of the pinhole camera image:
When light reflects from any surface, two laws always hold:
When an object is placed in front of a plane (flat) mirror, the image formed has the following properties:
| Property | Description |
|---|---|
| Nature | Virtual (cannot be projected onto a screen) |
| Upright | Right-way up (erect) |
| Laterally inverted | Left and right appear swapped (e.g. text appears reversed) |
| Same size | Image size equals object size |
| Same distance | Image is as far behind the mirror as the object is in front of it |
The image is behind the mirror because the eye traces reflected rays back as if they came from behind the mirror surface.
An object is placed 12 cm in front of a plane mirror. The image is formed 12 cm behind the mirror surface. The total object-to-image distance is 24 cm.
If the object moves 3 cm closer (now 9 cm from the mirror), the image also moves 3 cm closer to the mirror's back surface, and the total separation becomes 18 cm.
A simple periscope uses two plane mirrors (or two right-angle prisms) set at 45° to the horizontal, one above the other. Light enters the top mirror, reflects downward, then reflects again at the bottom mirror to the observer's eye. Periscopes are used in submarines and trenches to see above obstacles.
Always measure angles of incidence and reflection from the normal, not from the mirror surface. A common error is measuring from the mirror itself, which gives the complement of the correct angle.
For plane mirror questions: the image is the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it. State that the image is virtual, upright, laterally inverted, and the same size as the object.