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The inverted image on your microscope is caused by only having one lens on magnification, the convex magnificaton with the concave eyepeice causes the light to be fliped, accually, that's the way your eye recives it, it accually would be right-side up if your eye didn't flip it.

If you're talking about the color, then that's a totally different story, its mainly because that your eye(or camera) is too close to the light and it can only see it in odd ways, since the light is coming from the bottom of the specimen, it seems to make them look all black, so that also adds to the strange effect. Hope that answers your question.

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Q: Inverted image in microscope
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Related questions

Is image formed from microscope inverted or laterally inverted or just upside down?

It is laterally inverted. (:


How does the image of a specimen change when viewed under a compound microscope?

It is inverted .


Does a microscope form a real image?

Actually, the image doesn't form in the microscope. The image forms on your retinas. The microscope focuses light in such a way that it comes together correctly on your retinas.


What does a microscope do to the image of the letter A?

the letter "e" gets inverted, so its upside down


What is the position of an image under a microscope?

maybe it is rar fro each other


Is the image perceived through the microscope's eyepiece both vertically and laterally inverted?

yes.


Why are images observed in a light microscope reversed and inverted?

The lenses used reversed the image.


Why microscope produces inverted image?

The reason a microscope produces an inverted image is simply due to the number of lenses within it, or more specifically, the number of focal points it has. A microscope with a single lens will have a single focal point. Each focal point will invert the image once, meaning that a microscope with a single lens will produce an inverted image. If you were to add another lens to the microscope and align it the proper distance from the first lens, it would be possible to reorient the image to be right side up. As a side note, our eyes work the same way, the images coming into our eyes are inverted by our own lenses, its up to our brain to flip things right side up.


What does a microscope do to the image of the letter e?

the letter "e" gets inverted, so its upside down


How does the microscope change the image you see?

Why is the image of a letter inverted under a microscope?because it has a mirror below the stage ( the one where the specimens are being examind ) it dont reflects sunlight but also the image of a letter


Are images inverted with dissecting microscope?

Because as the image moves up the lens and into the head of the microscope, it hits a mirror that reflects the image back to you through the oculars, therefore you are looking at an inverted image.


How is the image changed when looked at under the microscope?

When an image is viewed through a microscope it is inverted, meaning turned upside down and it is also shown mirror image, meaning from left to right.