Depth of field decreases from low to high. This means what you see under the microscope is blurry. If both objects are not blurry, this means you have high depth-of-field.
The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
it will stay the same!!
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)
Going to high power on a microscope decreases the area of the field of view. The field of view is inversely proportional to the magnification of the objective lens. ... The specimen appears larger with a higher magnification because a smaller area of the object is spread out to cover the field of view of your eye
scanning
The diameter of a field is decreased by 1.5 millimeters when changed from low power to high power magnification.
The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
the difference between the low power and high power objectives on a microscope are that the low power objective has a lesser magnification than the high power objective
When using a compound microscope the depth of field decreases when the lens is focused close (High power). The intensity of the illumination (light) that gets though is less when the scope is high powered.
The High powered field of view is harder to measure.
hight power
it will stay the same!!
the diameter of the high power field microscope is 500 micrometers
2
NO, it means 10× high power field e.g. 1-2/10HPF means there are 1-2 per 10 × high power field
when viewing objects under high-power, the field of view is smaller, but you are able to see more details.
The advantage of LPO (Low Power Objective) is that it provides increased magnification and resolution for viewing smaller details on a specimen. The disadvantage is that it has a smaller field of view and less depth of field compared to lower magnification objectives. The advantage of HPO (High Power Objective) is that it offers even higher magnification for detailed examination of specimens. The disadvantage is that it has a very narrow depth of field, making it challenging to focus on thicker specimens or to view multiple layers simultaneously.