1000X magnification
750 X times
The eyepiece has a magnification and is usually 10x.
Probably the eyepiece, but it depends on the type of microscope. Some eyepieces do not have any magnification whatsoever.
The amount of magnification depends on the focal length of the eyepiece.
The oil immersion lens or objective has power 90X-100X and an eyepiece lens generally in light microscope comes with 10X so total magnification of oil immersion lens is 100X10 = 1,000
750 X times
Monocular eyepiece had only one lens while binocular only has 2.
To determine the magnification of the eyepiece on a microscope take the total magnification for the microscope and divide it by the total magnification of the objective lens. The answer is what the magnification is for the eyepiece.
The eyepiece has a magnification and is usually 10x.
Probably the eyepiece, but it depends on the type of microscope. Some eyepieces do not have any magnification whatsoever.
The total magnification is the object magnification for example 4x,10x etc. times eyepiece magnification usually 10x and you get the total magnification. The objective lens magnification is the lens right above the slide usually 4x,10x etc.
multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the high objective lens. for example, if the eyepiece magnifies x10, and the high objective magnifies x40, then the total magnification would be 400x
Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece - by the magnification of the object lens. For example - if the eyepiece is labeled 10x, and the object lense is 12x... then the total magnification is 120x
Depends which eyepiece you have inserted.
It would be 50x. To find the magnification, you just have to multiply the number eyepiece and the number objective. So for example, * A 10x eyepiece and a 40x objective would have a magnification of 400x * A 10x eyepiece and a 100x objective would have a magnification of 1,000x
That depends on the eyepiece, a 9mm eyepiece will have more magnification than a 22mm eyepiece.
The amount of magnification depends on the focal length of the eyepiece.