EYEPEICE...
THE LENS AT THE EYE END OF A MICROSCOPE BY WHICH THE IMAGE IS VIEWED...
THIS is answered by: Sweet Cupcake 13
:))))
its a kind of cheese.
slide
the lens at the top that you look through.they are usually 10x or 15x power
An eyepiece lens takes the bright light from the focus of the objectivce lens and magnifies it :)
Divide the focal length of the objective lens by the focal length of the eyepiece.
The eyepiece or ocular lens is the part of the microscope that you look through. It is located at the top of the microscope and magnifies the image of the specimen being viewed.
A microscope has an objective lens that magnifies the image of an object, which is then further enlarged by the eyepiece for viewing. This combination of lenses allows for detailed examination of small specimens.
Magnification numbers are how many times bigger an object appears than it actually is. For a basic microscope the eyepeice lens is usually x10. This means the object being shown through the lens is actually 10 times smaller than it actually is. When appearing through multiple lenses the magnification numbers are multiplied together. So, when using x40, in addition to the eyepeice the magnification is x400, or it appears 400x bigger than it actually is.
The total magnification of a microscope is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the eyepiece by that of the objective lens. In this case, with a 4x eyepiece and a 40x objective lens, the total magnification would be 4x multiplied by 40x, resulting in 160x magnification. Thus, the specimen would appear 160 times larger than its actual size.
The eyepiece in a microscope is the lens that you look through to observe the specimen on the slide. It magnifies the image created by the objective lens, which is the lens closest to the specimen. The eyepiece typically provides additional magnification to allow for detailed examination of the specimen.
The first number represents the magnification as if one was 9 or 10 times closer to the image. The larger the second number, the brighter and sharper the image
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.