![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() While I may have slightly over simplified my answer, there are a few other factors to consider. Very simply the laser, just as with any other type of light is only going to be able to emit 21% of it’s light pas⁶6t the coating while 74% is going to be reflective back into your side of the mirror. For instance let’s say the mirror’s reflective coating is rated at 74%. Because laser beams tend to be hot if a beam is allowed to stay focused on a particular spot on your mirror the reflective coating material will eventual become vaporized and allow even more of its light to pass through.īoth and how much of each is going to be dependant mainly upon it’s reflective properties or the properties of the reflective coating of the mirror. How powerful your laser is and the amount of time you allow your Lazer to stay focused on a particular spot on your mirror may also affect the amount of light that gets through…eventually that is. ![]() The color of the laser along with the color of the reflective coating is just one of these other factors to consider when calculating the amount of laser light that will, both, be reflected and just how much of your beam passes through. Very simply the laser, just as any light is only going to be able to emit 21% of it’s light while 74% is going to be reflective back into your side of the mirror. A single shard of the broken mirror found its way into Harry’s school truck, which he happened upon years later during the events of The Deathly Hallows.Both and how much of each is going to be dependant mainly upon it’s reflective properties or the properties of the reflective coating. Harry broke his mirror once he realized that Sirius might still be alive if he had used it to check on him before going to the Department of Mysteries at the Ministry of Magic instead of relying on Floo Powder. Harry only remembered his mirror at the end of Order of the Phoenix, after the events of the Department of Mysteries and Sirius’s death. Harry had decided not to use Sirius’s gift, thinking that he might only get his reckless godfather in more trouble. However, the fact that the mirrors were not used turned out to be a plot device in and of itself. The two-way mirror set that Sirius Black gave Harry was not used in the novel, so the scene was cut out of the film version. In the novel version of The Order of the Phoenix, the pair of two-way mirrors were more important plot devices, and their introduction to the series early on better prepared their later roles in The Deathly Hallows. The movie's omission of a seemingly insignificant detail from the novel where Sirius gave Harry a two-way mirror that would allow them to converse while Harry was at Hogwarts left a significant hole in the usually meticulous storytelling of the Harry Potter universe. This magical item was only vaguely explained in The Deathly Hallows movies because it wasn’t introduced in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. However, the presence of the mirror, as well as why Harry had a shard of it, how Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) knew that it used to belong to Sirius Black, and how Aberforth knew that he could use it to monitor Harry’s safety were all left unexplained by the films. Related: Why Harry Potter Didn't See The Thestrals Earlier (It's Not A Plot Hole) Aberforth admitted that he got it from Sirius Black’s house via Mundungus Fletcher and had been keeping an eye on Harry on his journey to find Voldemort’s Horcruxes. In The Deathly Hallows Part 2, they discovered that Dumbledore’s brother, Aberforth, had the rest of the mirror. When Harry and his friends were trapped in Malfoy Manor, Harry used the shard to call for help, and Dobby appeared. In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Harry had a small shard of mirror in which he began to see flashes of who he thought was Albus Dumbledore. ![]()
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