When looking through a microscope, if you move the slide left, the image will move right, and vice versa.
It would be the opposite, so the image would move to the left.
where did the image focus as you move the glass slide to the left
Because of how the lens and mirrors are set up.
You would move the slide to the left. Remember, the image you see is reversed and flipped. That means that if your organism is moving from right to left when you look under the microscope, that the actual organism on the slide is moving from left to right. Going off of that logic, if the REAL organism on the REAL slide is moving from left to right, than you would have to move the actual slide to the left in order to place right hand side of the slide (where the organism just moved) back into your view. This would reflect in what you see under the microscope as well since you put the real organism back into view.as a handy rule of thumb, when using a compound light microscope, pull the slide in the direction that the organism is moving out of view in to keep them in sight.
You use it to see the object on your slide on a compound microscope. Point a flashlight at the mirror to see.
i think towards you and to the left
Stereoscopic microscopes, also called low-power microscopes, dissection microscopes, or inspection microscopes, are designed for viewing "large" objects at low magnifications. Unlike a compound microscope which provides an inverted 2-dimensional image, stereo microscopes provide an erect (upright and unreversed) stereoscopic (3-dimensional) image......
You use it to see the object on your slide on a compound microscope. Point a flashlight at the mirror to see......sna poe makatulonq :DD
When you move the slide to the left, you will see the image go right when looking in the eyepiece. This is because everything is backwards in the microscope image.
When you move the slide of the microscope to the right, any object on the slide as well as the slide itself will appear to move to the left. In a microscope, the image is actually inverted sideways and upside down. Like a double reflection.
compare the movement of the slide, left and right or forward and backward to the movement of the eyepiece image? compare the movement of the slide, left and right or forward and backward to the movement of the eyepiece image? compare the movement of the slide, left and right or forward and backward to the movement of the eyepiece image?
you will see it go left
Specimen is what is on slide of microscope while image is what you see
You would move the slide to the left. Remember, the image you see is reversed and flipped. That means that if your organism is moving from right to left when you look under the microscope, that the actual organism on the slide is moving from left to right. Going off of that logic, if the REAL organism on the REAL slide is moving from left to right, than you would have to move the actual slide to the left in order to place right hand side of the slide (where the organism just moved) back into your view. This would reflect in what you see under the microscope as well since you put the real organism back into view.as a handy rule of thumb, when using a compound light microscope, pull the slide in the direction that the organism is moving out of view in to keep them in sight.
You use it to see the object on your slide on a compound microscope. Point a flashlight at the mirror to see.
A microscope inverts and transposes an image. A move left will therefore appear to move right through the eyepiece.
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In microscopy, the image moves in a different direction from how the slide is moved because the lens of a microscope inverts the image. The image moves in the opposite direction from the slide.
A stereo microscope shows two slides side by side at the same time and is used for comparison. A compound microscope only shows one slide.