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The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
the view will be brighter under low power magnification...
The diameter of a field is decreased by 1.5 millimeters when changed from low power to high power magnification.
It means you have a good 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.
it will stay the same!!
Higher magnification results in a narrower field-of-view.
It doesn't change the area of the slide. What it changes is the area in the field of view.
Microscopes vary in power. You can determine total magnification by the eyepiece and the lens.
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
when viewing objects under high-power, the field of view is smaller, but you are able to see more details.
as the magnification increases, your field of view decreases. so when your magnification decreases, your field of view increases. such as, for example, a brick wall. when your 2 blocks away from one, all you see is the brownish wall. that is the low power objective. then when you get right up to the wall, you see all the tiny details. that is the high power objective. just think about it like that. =D. i hope it helped