The eyepiece is the lens at the top of the microscope that you look in to see the magnified image of your specimen. The eyepiece also magnifies, usually 10x.
To determine the magnification of the eyepiece on a microscope take the total magnification for the microscope and divide it by the total magnification of the objective lens. The answer is what the magnification is for the eyepiece.
AnswerOcular Lens is another name for the eyepiece of a compound microscope.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
Body Tube holds the eyepiece
Depends which eyepiece you have inserted.
The eyepiece has a magnification and is usually 10x.
The body tube of a microscope separates the nose and eyepiece. It supports the eyepiece and allows the optics on the microscope to share a common axis.
No.
The eyepiece of a microscope is the top part of the microscope in which you look through to see your magnified object. There is no other name for the eyepiece The eyepiece holds the ocular lens. If there are two eyepieces (one for each eye) they are called biocular lenses.
The body tube of a microscope separates the nose and eyepiece. It supports the eyepiece and allows the optics on the microscope to share a common axis.