They are the same because magnification and resolution both let you see smaller detail.
no
it can be either 50x 100x 200x 400x 10x on a microcope as we are studying this in year 7 at parmiters high school in garston!
The visibility of the specimen decreases as the power of magnification increases on a microscope. The specimen area will shrink as the magnification is increased.
With higher magnification you can observe bigger.To see clearly resolution also should be high.
Adjusting a microscope's magnification settings can alter an object's field of view from a macro to micro areas. Higher magnification make the field of smaller and better defined, where lower settings increases the visible area.
Multiply the magnification of the ocular and objective lenses. For an example, an ocular lense with mag 10X and an objective lense with mag 40X would result in a total magnification of 400X.
The magnification amount on a microscope refers to how much larger an object appears when viewed through the microscope compared to the naked eye. Microscopes typically have adjustable magnification levels, commonly ranging from 40x to 1000x or higher. Higher magnification allows for greater detail and resolution of the specimen being observed.
Empty Magnification
Magnification
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The Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) has the highest magnification and resolution of all microscopes.
steven powers suck ****
Magnification lets you see an image larger than it is. But resolution makes the image clearer when magnified.
magnification is the number of times an object is enlarged, while resolution is the amount of data (detail) in an image.
Electron microscope.Transition microscope has a magnification of *500,000 and resolution of 0.5nm.
mass density
mas density
No. It would have a magnification of 400. The resolution is not directly related to the magnification. It could be higher or lower.
Magnification is an enlargement of the specimen which looks bigger as the magnification increases. Resolution is the the smallest increment available. The difference between these can be explained with the example of a ruler that has 1/8" markings. Magnification will make the separation of the markings look bigger, but the resolution of the ruler doesn't change, the markings are still 1/8" apart. However, magnification can improve the resolution because you can now see things bigger. For example the separation between the markings of the ruler could be divided down even more under magnification.