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The ocular and objectives
because it has many compound parts to the microscope ex. body tube, ocular lens,coarse adjustment(rough), and fine adjustment (sharp)
The ocular and objectives
AnswerOcular Lens is another name for the eyepiece of a compound microscope.
The objective lenses of a compound microscope are the parts that magnify the object being viewed. These lenses are located close to the specimen and provide the initial magnification before the image is further magnified by the eyepiece.
The magnifying parts of a compound microscope are the objective lens and the ocular lens. The objective lens is located near the specimen and provides the initial magnification, while the ocular lens further magnifies the image for viewing. Together, these lenses work to increase the overall magnification power of the microscope.
The magnification of a compound light microscope is determined by multiplying the magnification of the ocular lens (eyepiece) by the magnification of the objective lens. For example, if the ocular lens has a magnification of 10x and the objective lens has a magnification of 40x, the total magnification would be 10x * 40x = 400x.
200X 20X * 10X The 10X is the ocular lens of compound microscopes. Where your eyes go.
The ocular lenses on a microscope are located at the top of the microscope's eyepiece tube. They are the lenses that you look through to view the magnified specimen on the microscope slide.
A compound light microscope is called so because it uses two lenses to magnify objects: the objective lens and the ocular lens. The use of multiple lenses allows for higher magnification and clearer image resolution compared to a simple microscope.
The ocular lens magnify the image 10x.
The body tube of a compound optical microscope contains the ocular lens which focuses the image from the objective lens and allows you to view the image on the stage.