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it becomes bigger
Our view becomes larger and a lot more clearer with a lot of details.
When a microscope is parcentered, the specimens will appear centered in the field of view at every magnification. So if a field of a slide is centered at the lowest power, even though the field diameter shrinks at each higher magnification, the desired part of the specimen will remain in the center of the viewing field.
It doesn't change the area of the slide. What it changes is the area in the field of view.
as you zoom in the view gets bigger and if its not in the middle you wont be able to see it properly .
The visibility of the specimen decreases as the power of magnification increases on a microscope. The specimen area will shrink as the magnification is increased.
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
The field of view becomes smaller when magnification increases.
The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
As the magnification of the objective increases, the FOV decreases
as the magnification increases, your field of view decreases. so when your magnification decreases, your field of view increases. such as, for example, a brick wall. when your 2 blocks away from one, all you see is the brownish wall. that is the low power objective. then when you get right up to the wall, you see all the tiny details. that is the high power objective. just think about it like that. =D. i hope it helped
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
it becomes bigger
Adjusting a microscope's magnification settings can alter an object's field of view from a macro to micro areas. Higher magnification make the field of smaller and better defined, where lower settings increases the visible area.
Increasing the magnification on a light microscope will decreased the diameter of the field of view. You are essentially looking closer and closer at the objects. For example: Using your hand (thumb to fingertips), create a circle as if holding a telescope. Hold your hand-telescope up to one eye and look through it at your screen. Now, move closer to the computer screen... The size of the field you are able to see gets smaller...that's what happens with a microscope lens. As you increase the magnification, the lens gets closer to the specimen.
It becomes smaller as the detail becomes better.