nothing it is exactly the same just backward.
When you move the slide to the left, you will see the image go right when looking in the eyepiece. This is because everything is backwards in the microscope image.
It breaks
no. upside down and backwards
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a slide
Look sideways at the slide table. SLOWLY lower the tube until it just touches the slide on the slide table. Then look through the eyepiece and SLOWLY focus BACKWARDS. That's your best bet.
So light can pass through the slide to the objective.
It appears to move up.
Movements viewed through the microscope are exaggerated quite a bit. As such, it's best to attempt to line up the object on the slide by looking at the slide directly, rather than through the objective.
Movements viewed through the microscope are exaggerated quite a bit. As such, it's best to attempt to line up the object on the slide by looking at the slide directly, rather than through the objective.
If your microscope is a Transmission Microscope then light has to pass through the specimen (that is how the microscope works).Other kinds of microscopes may not require this.
you will see it go left