depends which microscope ur using..... the strongest (not NASA's) is about 1,000x The definition of magnification power is given by the relationship: Magnification = 250 mm / f
Thus, a 25-mm focal-length positive lens would be a 10x magnifier.
4000X, but if you buy a better objective lens and the like, it could reach well over 5000X. However, no matter how much you magnify, your specimen will still be unclear and will always seem out of focus because of the way light behaves under such high magnification. Staining techniques and the use of oil submersions are just as important as magnification if you want to distinguish between the organelles or certain features of the specimen.
An electron microscope achieves the highest magnification and greatest resolution. A scanning electron microscope provides the lowest magnification you can use to see a cell structure.
An electron microscope has the highest magnification. It can magnify up to 10,000,000x with a resolution of 50 piercometers.
up to about 1000 times their actual size.
500x
The standard microscope is that the eyepiece is 10x magnification, and three types of powered magnification helps it magnify even more. Low power is 4x, Medium power is 10x, and High power is 40x. Eyepiece and Low power is 40x, Eyepiece and Medium power is 100x, and Eyepiece and High power is 400x magnification in revolance to the naked eye.
yo mama face
The Dissecting Light Microscope range of magnification is 20x to 80x. The Compound Light Microscope ranges from 40x to 1000x -40x Scanning -100x Low Power -400x High Power -1000x Oil Immersion
the difference between the low power and high power objectives on a microscope are that the low power objective has a lesser magnification than the high power objective
Impossible to answer ! 200x magnification could be created by an eyepiece with 4x and an objective lens of 50x magnification - but that's just ONE example !
the magnification power of a microscope
low-power magnificatin = (10x)(4x) = 40x high-power magnification = (10x)(40x) = 400x It depends on what magnification you are looking for; high-power magnification OR low-power magnification.
The power of a light microscope can be determined by multiplying the magnification power of the eyepiece by the magnification power of the current lens. Ex. (10x) by (40x) results in in a 400x magnification.
Magnification = Size drawn / Actual size
the view will be brighter under low power magnification...
Microscopes vary in power. You can determine total magnification by the eyepiece and the lens.
The lower power objective is the lens on the microscope that gives you the lowest magnification. The exact magnification is 40x
Low power magnification is considered to be a hundred times. This is the result of multiplying the objective and optical lenses which have the power of 10.
If magnification increases ONLY, then resolving power does not increase. However, if the magnification increased while staying in focus (upgrading resolution and magnification with objective lense), shorter wavelengths are needed to stay in focus with increased magnification to yield the same high resolution as with previous objective lense, so this case, resolving power does increase.
The oil immersion lens or objective has power 90X-100X and an eyepiece lens generally in light microscope comes with 10X so total magnification of oil immersion lens is 100X10 = 1,000
mass density
The magnification power of modern microscopes is amazing.