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It depends on what magnification the ocular lens is (usually 10x), then you multiply that by the objective lens magnification (what you said to be 40x).

So the microscope would magnify your specimen by 400 times.

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Q: How many times is the image of the e magnified when you view through the high power objective 40?
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How is the image of an object seen through the high power objective different from the image seen through the low-power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


Why aren't the magnificaions of both ocular lenses of a binocular microscope used to calculate total magnification?

Because each eye needs its own magnified image. Put another way: Your brain doesn't add the magnification power of the image seen on the left to the magnification power of the image seen on the right. If only one ocular was magnified, you wouldn't be able to see the magnified image in both eyes---the eye with the unmagnified image would see unmagnified and the eye with the magnified image would see magnified. Am I understanding the question correctly?


What is the function of the objective lens of microscope?

WordNet - Cite This Source - Share This objective lensnoun the lens or system of lenses in a telescope or microscope that is nearest the object being viewed [syn: objective]WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. View results from: Dictionary | Thesaurus | En


How many times would a cell be magnified if you viewed it through the low power lens?

10 times


How to determine the total magnification when using any objective of your microscope?

Ask a jellyfish yea.....well if you don't have a jellyfish around when you need it, you can also look at the magnifier, so if a regular microscope has 4x under lwo power, it is 40x, due to 10x already when you look through the ocular piece. so medium power is 10x, would be 100 times magnified, and 40x for high is 400 times magnified.

Related questions

How is the image of an object seen through the high-power objective from the image seen through the low-power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


How is the image seen through the low power objective different from the image seen through the high power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


How is the image of an object seen through high-power objective different from the image seen through the low-power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


How is the image of an object seen through the high power objective different from the image seen through the low-power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


How is the image of an object seen through the high- power objective different from the images seen through the low power objective?

1. The Magnification increases 2. The Field of view decrees 3. The image of intensity decreases


What does a high-power objective do on a microscope?

The high-power objective magnifies the image 4x.


Why aren't the magnificaions of both ocular lenses of a binocular microscope used to calculate total magnification?

Because each eye needs its own magnified image. Put another way: Your brain doesn't add the magnification power of the image seen on the left to the magnification power of the image seen on the right. If only one ocular was magnified, you wouldn't be able to see the magnified image in both eyes---the eye with the unmagnified image would see unmagnified and the eye with the magnified image would see magnified. Am I understanding the question correctly?


What is the function of the objective lens of microscope?

WordNet - Cite This Source - Share This objective lensnoun the lens or system of lenses in a telescope or microscope that is nearest the object being viewed [syn: objective]WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. View results from: Dictionary | Thesaurus | En


How many times would a cell be magnified if you viewed it through the low power lens?

10 times


How to determine the total magnification when using any objective of your microscope?

Ask a jellyfish yea.....well if you don't have a jellyfish around when you need it, you can also look at the magnifier, so if a regular microscope has 4x under lwo power, it is 40x, due to 10x already when you look through the ocular piece. so medium power is 10x, would be 100 times magnified, and 40x for high is 400 times magnified.


What is the total magnification of the swift compound microscope when viewing an image under the lowest power objective?

50x


Which objective would be better to use when using a scanning slide?

Might add extra, but i really hope this helps! scanning objective - for locating the specimen on the slide (= low power objective) high power objective - magnifies the specimen to provide a detailed image coarse adjustment - used to focus the image when using low power diaphragm - used to adjust the amount of light passing through the specimen revolving nosepiece - holds the three objective lenses - it can be rotated to change the objective in use arm - holds the stage and the lens system - can be used to tilt the microscope (but not advised) substaGe lamp - provides a uniform illumination (more reliable than daylight !!)