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the naswe is 400
20x objective
The field of view (how much of the specimen you can see) would change either getting smaller or larger depending on the objective switched to.
Hydrometer is nothing but a tube kept floated in the liquid. If we keep the same weight within the tube then it is known as constant weight hydrometer. So it would immerse more in less denser liquid and the depth of immersion will be more So density of the liquid = Depth of immersion in water / depth of immersion in the liquid
Since a neutron has no charge, it would not be deflected by a magnetic field.
You use the 3 objective lenses of a compound microscope to switch powers. There's LOW, MEDIUM, and HIGH power. With LOW power, you can magnify what you're looking at. With HIGH power, you can see things that you can't see with a naked eye.
Depth of field is best demonstrated with a slide containing overlapping threads. The depth of field that would increase is the low power objective.
the naswe is 400
20 paltelets
20x objective
When using the oil immersion objective, the oil has the same refractive index as the glass. So it is like an extension of the lens. Water does not have the same refraction index as glass, so the image would not be as clear.
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.
low-power because there's more of a field of depth where you can see more rather then in the high power you can't see as much and only one object will be in focus while everything else would be blurry in the background (if there's more then one thing in the slide)
950
The main objective would be reliable, dependable power when needed, were needed.
The main objective would be reliable, dependable power when needed, were needed.
Medium power objective gives the medium (as oppose to large or small), field of vision and the greatest depth of field. When you move the lens' position (CLose or far from the slide) it would be the middle. Read the textbook it will be of more benefit; or look it up on the internet you are on anyways. Type [edu] with brackets for a page of more scholarly links (if their domain is .edu).